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{{trope}}
{{trope}}
[[File:FoxSucks_3557.png|link=The Simpsons (animation)|right]]
[[File:FoxSucks 3557.png|link=The Simpsons (animation)|frame]]


{{quote|''"BBC bastards."''|'''Steve''', ''[[Coupling]]'' (a show financed by [[The BBC]])}}
{{quote|''"BBC bastards."''
|'''Steve'''|''[[Coupling]]'' (a show financed by [[The BBC]])}}


When on a comedy the characters make jokes at the expense of the studio or network funding their movie or TV show. In the US, the favorite target out of the Big Four Networks seems to be FOX, although all networks are [[Acceptable Targets]] at some point or another.
When on a comedy the characters make jokes at the expense of the studio or network funding their movie or TV show. In the US, the favorite target out of the Big Four Networks seems to be FOX, although all networks are [[Acceptable Targets]] at some point or another.
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This trope would also fit those moments when an embittered author, or one cynical of the morality of the publishing industry, inserts into his work a thinly disguised slap to the face of the publishing house that is keeping him in work, albeit for not entirely satisfactory royalties or advance payments.
This trope would also fit those moments when an embittered author, or one cynical of the morality of the publishing industry, inserts into his work a thinly disguised slap to the face of the publishing house that is keeping him in work, albeit for not entirely satisfactory royalties or advance payments.


A sister trope to [[Take That]]. Related to [[Take That, Audience!]]. Remembering who wears the pants can combine this with [[End of Series Awareness]].
A sister trope to [[Take That]] and [[Writer Revolt]]. Related to [[Take That, Audience!]]. Remembering who wears the pants can combine this with [[End of Series Awareness]].


{{examples}}
{{examples}}

== Anime and Manga ==
== Anime and Manga ==
* One arc of ''[[Digimon Adventure]]'' ends with a climactic battle in the Fuji TV station, which broadcast the show in Japan. It's mercilessly destroyed, although part of the architecture is used to destroy the [[Big Bad]]. The English dub just refers to "the TV station," which is a shame--the dub aired on Fox and everything!
* One arc of ''[[Digimon Adventure]]'' ends with a climactic battle in the Fuji TV station, which broadcast the show in Japan. It's mercilessly destroyed, although part of the architecture is used to destroy the [[Big Bad]]. The English dub just refers to "the TV station," which is a shame—the dub aired on Fox and everything!
* Speaking of the Fuji TV station, it also occurred in several ''[[Kochikame]]'' TV specials which the building was destroyed during the climaxes. One time, its architecture was used as a wrecking ball to knock a few stories off a skyscraper.
* Speaking of the Fuji TV station, it also occurred in several ''[[Kochikame]]'' TV specials which the building was destroyed during the climaxes. One time, its architecture was used as a wrecking ball to knock a few stories off a skyscraper.
* The first episode of the [[OVA]] ''[[Dangaioh]]'' had the AIC building (''Dangaioh'''s production company) destroyed by the invading bad guys.
* The first episode of the [[OVA]] ''[[Dangaioh]]'' had the AIC building (''Dangaioh'''s production company) destroyed by the invading bad guys.
* With ''[[Tiger and Bunny]]'', [[Sunrise]] figured out that the best way to make use of blatant [[Product Placement]] was to make fun of blatant [[Product Placement]].
* With ''[[Tiger and Bunny]]'', [[Sunrise (company)|Sunrise]] figured out that the best way to make use of blatant [[Product Placement]] was to make fun of blatant [[Product Placement]].
{{quote| '''Jackson:''' You know who made you a hero, right?<br />
{{quote|'''Jackson:''' You know who made you a hero, right?
'''Kotetsu:''' Our sponsors, sir!<br />
'''Kotetsu:''' Our sponsors, sir!
'''Jackson:''' Good! }}
'''Jackson:''' Good! }}
* A dub example. If you play [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RZlIcJbbm08&fmt=18 a scene] in episode 130 of [[Pokémon (anime)|Pokémon]] [[Subliminal Seduction|backwards]], you will hear James say "Leo Burnett and 4kids are the devil! Leo Burnett!" 4kids is the company that dubbed the series.
* A dub example. If you play [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RZlIcJbbm08&fmt=18 a scene] in episode 130 of [[Pokémon (anime)|Pokémon]] [[Subliminal Seduction|backwards]], you will hear James say "Leo Burnett and 4kids are the devil! Leo Burnett!" 4kids is the company that dubbed the series.
* In-universe example in [[Kannagi]]. Akiba brings a taped show for the main character Jin, because Jin accidentally taped over a show that Nagi hadn't watched yet on a VHS tape. He first hands out a Blu-ray, then when Jin mentions not having a Blu-ray player, he pulls out a tape. Nagi asks what it is, and turns out it's a Betamax tape, which Jin also doesn't have a player for. Cue the characters looking at Akiba.
* In-universe example in ''[[Kannagi]]''. Akiba brings a taped show for the main character Jin, because Jin accidentally taped over a show that Nagi hadn't watched yet on a VHS tape. He first hands out a Blu-ray, then when Jin mentions not having a Blu-ray player, he pulls out a tape. Nagi asks what it is, and turns out it's a Betamax tape, which Jin also doesn't have a player for. Cue the characters looking at Akiba.
{{quote| '''Akiba:''' [[Gratuitous English|Its a Sony!]]}}
{{quote|'''Akiba:''' [[Gratuitous English|Its a Sony!]]}}
** Said show was produced by Aniplex, [[It Makes Sense in Context|so it's sponsored by Sony.]]
** Said show was produced by Aniplex, [[It Makes Sense in Context|so it's sponsored by Sony.]]
* "''[[Daily Lives of High School Boys]]'' was lazily brought to you by these sponsors..."
* "''[[Daily Lives of High School Boys]]'' was lazily brought to you by these sponsors..."
** "''Daily Lives of High School Boys'' was intermittently brought to you by these sponsors..."
** "''Daily Lives of High School Boys'' was intermittently brought to you by these sponsors..."
** "''Daily Lives of High School Boys'' should have been brought to you by these sponsors..."
** "''Daily Lives of High School Boys'' should have been brought to you by these sponsors..."



== Comic Books ==
== Comic Books ==
* In the first ''[[Great Lakes Avengers]]'', [[Squirrel Girl]] and Grasshopper appear in an offstage prologue. Grasshopper says "The only people reading comics now are [[Take That, Audience!|overweight thirty-year-olds]] [[Basement Dweller|living in their mother's basement]]." [[Squirrel Girl]]'s sidekick replies in an inset: "Hey, fanboys, don't take that lying down! Write angry letters to [[Marvel]] today!"
* In the first ''[[Great Lakes Avengers]]'', [[Squirrel Girl]] and Grasshopper appear in an offstage prologue. Grasshopper says "The only people reading comics now are [[Take That, Audience!|overweight thirty-year-olds]] [[Basement Dweller|living in their mother's basement]]." [[Squirrel Girl]]'s sidekick replies in an inset: "Hey, fanboys, don't take that lying down! Write angry letters to [[Marvel]] today!"
* Hazmat in ''Avengers Academy'' #10: "Today's gonna suck as much as all the others... but just a little bit ''harder''. Because it's ''[[One More Day]]''... with ''no end in sight''."
* Hazmat in ''Avengers Academy'' #10: "Today's gonna suck as much as all the others... but just a little bit ''harder''. Because it's ''[[One More Day]]''... with ''no end in sight''."
* A comic story of [[The Grim Adventures of Billy and Mandy]] has Grim using his scythe for a rather ridiculous reason, to which Mandy responds "Doesn't this comic have ''any'' standards?"
* A comic story of ''[[The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy]]'' has Grim using his scythe for a rather ridiculous reason, to which Mandy responds "Doesn't this comic have ''any'' standards?"



== Film ==
== Film ==
* ''[[Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back]]'' was full of these jokes.
* ''[[Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back]]'' was full of these jokes.
** Case in point...
** Case in point...
{{quote| '''[[Ben Affleck]]''': You're like a child. What've I been telling you? You gotta do the safe picture. Then you can do the art picture. But then sometimes you gotta do the payback picture because your friend says you owe him. ''[[Beat]] and [[Aside Glance]]''}}
{{quote|'''[[Ben Affleck]]''': You're like a child. What've I been telling you? You gotta do the safe picture. Then you can do the art picture. But then sometimes you gotta do the payback picture because your friend says you owe him. ''[[Beat]] and [[Aside Glance]]''}}
* ''[[Wayne's World]]'' actually had this as a plot point, with the boys making fun of their show's sponsor.
* ''[[Wayne's World]]'' actually had this as a plot point, with the boys making fun of their show's sponsor.
** And in the sequel, their trip to London is shown via second-unit footage with incredibly bad stand-ins while they marvel in voice-over [[Sarcasm Mode|how nice of Paramount it was to send them to London for real]].
** And in the sequel, their trip to London is shown via second-unit footage with incredibly bad stand-ins while they marvel in voice-over [[Sarcasm Mode|how nice of Paramount it was to send them to London for real]].
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* In ''[[Impromptu]]'', a group of struggling artists put on a theater production for their wealthy patrons that insult said patrons. The artists give "true art is offensive" as their justification.
* In ''[[Impromptu]]'', a group of struggling artists put on a theater production for their wealthy patrons that insult said patrons. The artists give "true art is offensive" as their justification.
* After [[RoboCop]] has been reprogrammed in ''Robocop 2'', one of his directives is to "avoid Orion meetings".
* After [[RoboCop]] has been reprogrammed in ''Robocop 2'', one of his directives is to "avoid Orion meetings".
* ''[[Pee Wee's Big Adventure]]'' does this in the climax: Pee-Wee Herman sneaks into the Warner Bros. studio to find his stolen bike and escapes on it, but ends up being chased by studio security guards.
* ''[[Pee-wee's Big Adventure]]'' does this in the climax: Pee-Wee Herman sneaks into the Warner Bros. studio to find his stolen bike and escapes on it, but ends up being chased by studio security guards.
* The {{spoiler|near}} destruction of Pixar in ''[[Mission Impossible (film)|Mission Impossible]]: Ghost Protocol'', as seen in the trailer.
* The {{spoiler|near}} destruction of Pixar in ''[[Mission: Impossible (film)||Mission Impossible]]: Ghost Protocol'', as seen in the trailer.
* At the end of ''[[Holy Flying Circus]]'', [[Stephen Fry|God]] tells Michael Palin that he's having a dream that will probably be used as the ending for a heavy-handed [[BBC 4]] comedy/drama.
* At the end of ''[[Holy Flying Circus]]'', [[Stephen Fry|God]] tells Michael Palin that he's having a dream that will probably be used as the ending for a heavy-handed [[BBC 4]] comedy/drama.
{{quote| '''Michael''': Gosh, there's a BBC''4'' in the future? They must be doing well.}}
{{quote|'''Michael''': Gosh, there's a BBC''4'' in the future? They must be doing well.}}
** God's response is to chuckle.
** God's response is to chuckle.
* A subtle one in '''[[Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (film)]]''; in one scene, Raphael walks out of a theater after seeing ''[[Critters| Critters 2]]'' - which, like the Turtles movie, was produced by New Line Cinema - and exclaims, [[Who Writes This Crap?| "Where do they come up with this stuff?"]] Possibly also done to lampoon the fact that [[Hypocritical Humor|mutant turtles like Raphael are just as weird as the aliens in the film.]]



== Literature ==
== Literature ==
* In ''[[Discworld/Maskerade|Maskerade]]'', Terry Pratchett manages a dig at the publishing industry and the morality of book publishers by having Nanny Ogg bilked over a publishing deal, in which her payment for a best-seller is the usual gratis author's copy of the book and nothing else. Granny Weatherwax plays catch-up on her friend's behalf and demonstrates that a publisher's worst nightmare is a cheated witch. They leave the offices with an advance payment of five thousand dollars.
* In ''[[Maskerade]]'', Terry Pratchett manages a dig at the publishing industry and the morality of book publishers by having Nanny Ogg bilked over a publishing deal, in which her payment for a best-seller is the usual gratis author's copy of the book and nothing else. Granny Weatherwax plays catch-up on her friend's behalf and demonstrates that a publisher's worst nightmare is a cheated witch. They leave the offices with an advance payment of five thousand dollars.
* Sci-fi author Philip José Farmer, in his [[Riverworld]] series where all the Earth's population is resurrected into a wholly unexpected afterlife, has the character who is his [[Marty Stu]] in the book (legitimate,as we are ''all'' characters on the Riverworld) meet a publisher who once cheated him. Near-lethal vengeance is administered. The publisher is given the name Sharko.
* Sci-fi author [[Philip José Farmer]], in his ''[[Riverworld]]'' series where all the Earth's population is resurrected into a wholly unexpected afterlife, has the character who is his [[Marty Stu]] in the book (legitimate, as we are ''all'' characters on the Riverworld) meet a publisher who once cheated him. Near-lethal vengeance is administered. The publisher is given the name Sharko.



== Live-Action TV ==
== Live-Action TV ==
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* ''[[Married... with Children]]'' had an episode in which the cast assumed "Fox viewing positions," which involved grabbing onto the rabbit ears, standing on one foot, balancing pots on their heads, etc. For you youngsters who've always had cable, the Fox network originally used mostly UHF stations, which were sometimes hard to tune in depending on weather, etc. This was just one of many, many pokes at Fox's programming reputation.
* ''[[Married... with Children]]'' had an episode in which the cast assumed "Fox viewing positions," which involved grabbing onto the rabbit ears, standing on one foot, balancing pots on their heads, etc. For you youngsters who've always had cable, the Fox network originally used mostly UHF stations, which were sometimes hard to tune in depending on weather, etc. This was just one of many, many pokes at Fox's programming reputation.
** Several episodes had a family member watching TV and hearing/listening to the promo for some utterly awful-sounding show, like "Psycho Dad" or "Psycho Mom". The promo would always conclude with the phrase, "On Fox!", to which the family member would reply, "Naturally."
** Several episodes had a family member watching TV and hearing/listening to the promo for some utterly awful-sounding show, like "Psycho Dad" or "Psycho Mom". The promo would always conclude with the phrase, "On Fox!", to which the family member would reply, "Naturally."
* ''[[Seinfeld]]'' did this trope as well, by having Jerry and George pitch a [[Show Within a Show]] to [[NBC]]. The pitch -- a show about nothing -- was the real life pitch for the real life ''Seinfeld''. According to [[Larry David]], the meeting really played a lot like the episode.
* ''[[Seinfeld]]'' did this trope as well, by having Jerry and George pitch a [[Show Within a Show]] to [[NBC]]. The pitch—a show about nothing—was the real life pitch for the real life ''Seinfeld''. According to [[Larry David]], the meeting really played a lot like the episode.
* ''[[True Blood]]'' does this with one of their sponsors: Nintendo. There have been at least two episodes where characters were shown playing the Nintendo Wii and having a good, wholesome time. Finally, near the very end of season two they had a clearly deranged stay-at-home mom flailing the Wii remote around as she killed in psychopathic glee...suddenly those previous scenes don't seem so wholesome.
* ''[[True Blood]]'' does this with one of their sponsors: Nintendo. There have been at least two episodes where characters were shown playing the Nintendo Wii and having a good, wholesome time. Finally, near the very end of season two they had a clearly deranged stay-at-home mom flailing the Wii remote around as she killed in psychopathic glee...suddenly those previous scenes don't seem so wholesome.
** Then season three started: No Wii.
** Then season three started: No Wii.
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** Before he changed networks, Letterman did plenty of digs at [[NBC]] and their parent company, General Electric.
** Before he changed networks, Letterman did plenty of digs at [[NBC]] and their parent company, General Electric.
*** [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N_kY8n3KfEY The final segment of the last episode Letterman's ill-fated 1980 morning show] was a hilariously mean [[Take That]] to NBC and the game show that took over his timeslot.
*** [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N_kY8n3KfEY The final segment of the last episode Letterman's ill-fated 1980 morning show] was a hilariously mean [[Take That]] to NBC and the game show that took over his timeslot.
** Jay Leno of ''[[The Tonight Show]]'' must have similar writers - he makes a lot of jokes at NBC's expense, too. He even makes jokes about how bad his jokes are.
** Jay Leno of ''[[The Tonight Show]]'' must have similar writers - he makes a lot of jokes at NBC's expense, too. He even makes jokes about how bad his jokes are.
* [[The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson|CBS cares.]]
* [[The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson|CBS cares.]]
* ''[[30 Rock|Thirty Rock]]'' also can't seem to stop making fun of NBC and General Electric.
* ''[[30 Rock|Thirty Rock]]'' also can't seem to stop making fun of NBC and General Electric.
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* Because it's his job to make fun of everything on television, [[Charlie Brooker]] makes fun of the Beeb on his BBC Four show ''[[Screenwipe]]'' just as much as anyone else. While he does make light jabs at BBC Four's pretentiousness with fake shows like ''Harpsichord Challenge'' and ''The History of Corners'', and BBC Three's pandering to the base with ''Sick on a Widow'', he also gives well deserved criticism at recent BBC recommendations relating to the [[Credits Pushback]].
* Because it's his job to make fun of everything on television, [[Charlie Brooker]] makes fun of the Beeb on his BBC Four show ''[[Screenwipe]]'' just as much as anyone else. While he does make light jabs at BBC Four's pretentiousness with fake shows like ''Harpsichord Challenge'' and ''The History of Corners'', and BBC Three's pandering to the base with ''Sick on a Widow'', he also gives well deserved criticism at recent BBC recommendations relating to the [[Credits Pushback]].
** At least one jab was aimed at the viewers, in a piece about computer games:
** At least one jab was aimed at the viewers, in a piece about computer games:
{{quote| "Yes, videogames are going through a renaissance, and you should not miss out - like you are now, by choosing to watch TV instead, like some kind of medieval throwback farmhand fuck."}}
{{quote|"Yes, videogames are going through a renaissance, and you should not miss out - like you are now, by choosing to watch TV instead, like some kind of medieval throwback farmhand fuck."}}
** Also, he often lays into Endemol produced shows such as ''[[Big Brother]]'', while Brooker's production company is itself a subsidiary of Endemol. At one point this is [[Lampshaded]], by immediately following a particularly vitriolic attack on Endemol with the Zeppotron/Endemol [[Vanity Plate]] from the end of the show.
:* Also, he often lays into Endemol produced shows such as ''[[Big Brother]]'', while Brooker's production company is itself a subsidiary of Endemol. At one point this is [[Lampshaded]], by immediately following a particularly vitriolic attack on Endemol with the Zeppotron/Endemol [[Vanity Plate]] from the end of the show.
** Brooker's ''[[Dead Set]]'', in which ''[[Big Brother]]'' contestants face a [[Zombie Apocalypse]], was also made by Zeppotron and was broadcast on [[Channel 4|E4]].
:* Brooker's ''[[Dead Set]]'', in which ''[[Big Brother]]'' contestants face a [[Zombie Apocalypse]], was also made by Zeppotron and was broadcast on [[Channel 4|E4]].
* Although not a comedy, ''[[The Bill]]'' had a moment where two character were checking a hotel's CCTV cameras during an undercover operation. They were making comments related to the order of channels on the TV set. [[BBC 2]] was gardening, ITV (the show's own channel, before it became [[ITV 1]]) was adverts and the final conclusion to the joke was that [[Channel 4]] (not named) was sex, as they discovered Dave and Polly kissing in a hotel room. Taking the joke further, [[Channel Five]] equals porn (although, not as much... [[CSI Verse|these days]].)
* Although not a comedy, ''[[The Bill]]'' had a moment where two character were checking a hotel's CCTV cameras during an undercover operation. They were making comments related to the order of channels on the TV set. [[BBC 2]] was gardening, ITV (the show's own channel, before it became [[ITV 1]]) was adverts and the final conclusion to the joke was that [[Channel 4]] (not named) was sex, as they discovered Dave and Polly kissing in a hotel room. Taking the joke further, [[Channel Five]] equals porn (although, not as much... [[CSI Verse|these days]].)
* In one skit on ''[[Whose Line Is It Anyway?|Whose Line Is It Anyway]]'', Colin Mochrie screamed at Ryan Stiles and Wayne Brady: "You're not human! You're less than human! You're ''network executives''!" However, after the game, Drew Carey went to great lengths to point out that Colin wasn't talking about ABC (the American one).
* In one skit on ''[[Whose Line Is It Anyway?|Whose Line Is It Anyway]]'', Colin Mochrie screamed at Ryan Stiles and Wayne Brady: "You're not human! You're less than human! You're ''network executives''!" However, after the game, Drew Carey went to great lengths to point out that Colin wasn't talking about ABC (the American one).
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** The Kate Jackson episode has a running gag revealing that Silverman (played by John Belushi) was sent to NBC by [[Charlie's Angels|Charlie]] to ruin the network.
** The Kate Jackson episode has a running gag revealing that Silverman (played by John Belushi) was sent to NBC by [[Charlie's Angels|Charlie]] to ruin the network.
** The 1979 Christmas show has a running gag of promos hyping Gary Coleman appearances on every other NBC show and special, since ''[[Diff'rent Strokes]]'' was one of the network's only hits at the time, along with ''SNL''.
** The 1979 Christmas show has a running gag of promos hyping Gary Coleman appearances on every other NBC show and special, since ''[[Diff'rent Strokes]]'' was one of the network's only hits at the time, along with ''SNL''.
** The "Limo for the Lame-O" [[wikipedia:Al Franken#Saturday Night Live|affair]]: Al Franken encouraged viewers to send letters to NBC asking that Franken get the use of a company limo -- since Silverman had one despite all the flops he'd launched, and Franken was on a hit show. This ''did not'' go over well with Silverman, and it led to him nixing Lorne Michaels' request that Franken succeed him as executive producer of ''SNL''.
** The "Limo for the Lame-O" [[wikipedia:Al Franken#Saturday Night Live|affair]]: Al Franken encouraged viewers to send letters to NBC asking that Franken get the use of a company limo—since Silverman had one despite all the flops he'd launched, and Franken was on a hit show. This ''did not'' go over well with Silverman, and it led to him nixing Lorne Michaels' request that Franken succeed him as executive producer of ''SNL''.
** Then there was the [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z3JLKw0q4kY "Conspiracy Theory Rock"] short from the 1998 season, which is about major corporations like General Electric controlling the media. It was banned from re-airing, but would appear on a TV Funhouse "Best Of" DVD.
** Then there was the [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z3JLKw0q4kY "Conspiracy Theory Rock"] short from the 1998 season, which is about major corporations like General Electric controlling the media. It was banned from re-airing, but would appear on a TV Funhouse "Best Of" DVD.
** In an installment of ''Weekend Update'':
** In an installment of ''Weekend Update'':
{{quote| '''Seth Meyers''': You have TV in Hell?<br />
{{quote|'''Seth Meyers''': You have TV in Hell?
'''The Devil''': Well, just NBC. }}
'''The Devil''': Well, just NBC. }}
* Towards the end of his run on ''[[The Tonight Show]]'', Conan got absolutely ''vicious'' with these. For example, he mentioned that his rating were up 50%(due to the controversy), and continued that he was on the wrong network. He also introduced new one-shot characters for no reason other than to be ''really'' expensive, such as the mouse made out of a Bugatti Veyron, with the backing track of the original studio recording version of the Rolling Stones' "Satisfaction". As he pointed out, both the broadcast rights and the syndication rights to the song were "crazy expensive", bringing the price tag of the character, who appeared for all of ''two minutes'', to '''1.5 million dollars.''' [[Sarcasm Mode|"What're they gonna do, fire me?"]]
* Towards the end of his run on ''[[The Tonight Show]]'', Conan got absolutely ''vicious'' with these. For example, he mentioned that his rating were up 50%(due to the controversy), and continued that he was on the wrong network. He also introduced new one-shot characters for no reason other than to be ''really'' expensive, such as the mouse made out of a Bugatti Veyron, with the backing track of the original studio recording version of the Rolling Stones' "Satisfaction". As he pointed out, both the broadcast rights and the syndication rights to the song were "crazy expensive", bringing the price tag of the character, who appeared for all of ''two minutes'', to '''1.5 million dollars.''' [[Sarcasm Mode|"What're they gonna do, fire me?"]]
** And then, when word got out that the network was banning him from saying bad things about them, he got around it by SINGING insults.
** And then, when word got out that the network was banning him from saying bad things about them, he got around it by SINGING insults.
*** And then, when that didn't work, he said them in ''Spanish'' (complete with ''subtitles''):
*** And then, when that didn't work, he said them in ''Spanish'' (complete with ''subtitles''):
{{quote| "NBC is like a Goat that Eats Money and Shits Trouble."}}
{{quote|"NBC is like a Goat that Eats Money and Shits Trouble."}}
**** The Bugatti Veyron was on loan. Conan admitted the "crazy expensive" skits were jokes after fake ground sloth skeleton spraying fake beluga caviar on a fake authentic Picasso painting. It's also unclear how much NBC tried to prevent Conan's incredibly popular ravaging of the network and how much Conan just made up for laughs. Nearly all of his final two weeks at NBC were this trope, however.
:::* The Bugatti Veyron was on loan. Conan admitted the "crazy expensive" skits were jokes after fake ground sloth skeleton spraying fake beluga caviar on a fake authentic Picasso painting. It's also unclear how much NBC tried to prevent Conan's incredibly popular ravaging of the network and how much Conan just made up for laughs. Nearly all of his final two weeks at NBC were this trope, however.
** Not only that, Conan would often bash NBC and promote other networks, ''simply while conversing with guests'' and not making a bit out of it. It's likely Conan was saying these things simply because he really felt that way (hosting the Tonight Show was a life-long dream of his) and mostly got laughs because they were very cathartic.
::* Not only that, Conan would often bash NBC and promote other networks, ''simply while conversing with guests'' and not making a bit out of it. It's likely Conan was saying these things simply because he really felt that way (hosting the Tonight Show was a life-long dream of his) and mostly got laughs because they were very cathartic.
* ''[[The Daily Show]]'' and ''[[The Colbert Report]]'' do this frequently. One toss between the two shows had a jealous Colbert mocking fellow Daily Show alumnus Ed Helms for [[The Office|not having a nightly show]]. When reminded that his own show was on ''Comedy Central'', Colbert broke down sobbing: "I know! God, it's horrible! I wish I was on the Food Network!"
* ''[[The Daily Show]]'' and ''[[The Colbert Report]]'' do this frequently. One toss between the two shows had a jealous Colbert mocking fellow Daily Show alumnus Ed Helms for [[The Office|not having a nightly show]]. When reminded that his own show was on ''Comedy Central'', Colbert broke down sobbing: "I know! God, it's horrible! I wish I was on the Food Network!"
** An episode of the former once showed a clip of [[Barack Obama]] being asked if he had ever seen the [[Comedy Central]] show '''[[Lil' Bush]]'', to which he replied "I heard of it, but I've never seen it." Cut to Stewart saying "Join the club."
** An episode of the former once showed a clip of [[Barack Obama]] being asked if he had ever seen the [[Comedy Central]] show '''[[Lil' Bush]]'', to which he replied "I heard of it, but I've never seen it." Cut to Stewart saying "Join the club."
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** An example of another network getting its hand bit on ''[[The Daily Show]]'': In 1997 [[Keith Olbermann]], a ''[[Sports Center]]'' anchor at the time, appeared as a guest on the ''[[The Daily Show]]'' with [[The Pete Best|Craig Kilborn]] (himself a ''[[Sports Center]]'' anchor before becoming host of ''[[The Daily Show]]'') without permission from his bosses at [[ESPN]], as required by that network's rules. During the interview Olbermann was asked (as part of the now-retired Five Questions segment) "What's the most god-forsaken place on the East Coast?" and answered "Bristol, Connecticut." Bristol happens to be the headquarters of [[ESPN]]. He got a two-week suspension, and the incident partially led to his departure from [[ESPN]] that year.
** An example of another network getting its hand bit on ''[[The Daily Show]]'': In 1997 [[Keith Olbermann]], a ''[[Sports Center]]'' anchor at the time, appeared as a guest on the ''[[The Daily Show]]'' with [[The Pete Best|Craig Kilborn]] (himself a ''[[Sports Center]]'' anchor before becoming host of ''[[The Daily Show]]'') without permission from his bosses at [[ESPN]], as required by that network's rules. During the interview Olbermann was asked (as part of the now-retired Five Questions segment) "What's the most god-forsaken place on the East Coast?" and answered "Bristol, Connecticut." Bristol happens to be the headquarters of [[ESPN]]. He got a two-week suspension, and the incident partially led to his departure from [[ESPN]] that year.
** Colbert also mocks this trope a lot, when he was feeling uneasy about giving Jon advertising.
** Colbert also mocks this trope a lot, when he was feeling uneasy about giving Jon advertising.
{{quote| "No free rides, [[The Daily Show|guy]] who made my career."}}
{{quote|"No free rides, [[The Daily Show|guy]] who made my career."}}
** When ''[[The Colbert Report]]'' debuted it was followed by a short-lived talk show called ''Too Late With Adam Carolla''. One night Stephen closed his show by saying, "Stay tuned for Adam Carolla. His guest tonight? Comedy."
:* When ''[[The Colbert Report]]'' debuted it was followed by a short-lived talk show called ''Too Late With Adam Carolla''. One night Stephen closed his show by saying, "Stay tuned for Adam Carolla. His guest tonight? Comedy."
* ''[[Strangers with Candy]]'' bit the hand hard in their final episode. Two property developers show up at Flatpoint High and repeatedly deny that they're tearing it down and building a strip mall, even as classrooms are demolished and food outlets built in their place. At the end of the episode, the teachers and students [[Trash the Set|go on a rampage of destruction and burn down the school]], with one teacher gloating "They'll never turn it into a strip mall now!" The [[Reality Subtext]]: the property developers were based on two Comedy Central network execs. ''[[Strangers with Candy]]'' was being cancelled, and replaced with a show called ''Strip Mall''.
* ''[[Strangers with Candy]]'' bit the hand hard in their final episode. Two property developers show up at Flatpoint High and repeatedly deny that they're tearing it down and building a strip mall, even as classrooms are demolished and food outlets built in their place. At the end of the episode, the teachers and students [[Trash the Set|go on a rampage of destruction and burn down the school]], with one teacher gloating "They'll never turn it into a strip mall now!" The [[Reality Subtext]]: the property developers were based on two Comedy Central network execs. ''[[Strangers with Candy]]'' was being cancelled, and replaced with a show called ''Strip Mall''.
* During the 2006 Emmy Awards on NBC, host Conan O'Brien, whose show is also on NBC, puts it delicately:
* During the 2006 Emmy Awards on NBC, host Conan O'Brien, whose show is also on NBC, puts it delicately:
{{quote| Yeah, we got trouble, right here at NBC<br />
{{quote|Yeah, we got trouble, right here at NBC
With a capital "T" and that rhymes with "G" as in "Gee, we're screwed!"<br />
With a capital "T" and that rhymes with "G" as in "Gee, we're screwed!"
Yeah, we got trouble, right here at NBC<br />
Yeah, we got trouble, right here at NBC
I hate to disrespect, but my lawyer checked and I can't be sued! }}
I hate to disrespect, but my lawyer checked and I can't be sued! }}
** There was also a hilarious crack about how since the ceremony was on NBC, it would probably be canceled halfway through.
:* There was also a hilarious crack about how since the ceremony was on NBC, it would probably be canceled halfway through.
** In early 2010, Conan is once again taking shots at NBC, although this is less "Biting the hand that feeds" and more "Mauling the arm that hit you."
:* In early 2010, Conan is once again taking shots at NBC, although this is less "Biting the hand that feeds" and more "Mauling the arm that hit you."
** This all came full circle with Jimmy Fallon hosting the 2010 Emmys
:* This all came full circle with Jimmy Fallon hosting the 2010 Emmys
{{quote| So NBC asked the host of Late Night to come to LA and host a different show. [[Tempting Fate|What could possibly go wrong?]]}}
{{quote|So NBC asked the host of Late Night to come to LA and host a different show. [[Tempting Fate|What could possibly go wrong?]]}}
* ''[[Harry Hill's TV Burp|Harry Hills TV Burp]]'' makes fun of all channels about equally and does not spare its parent ITV. For example:
* ''[[Harry Hill's TV Burp|Harry Hills TV Burp]]'' makes fun of all channels about equally and does not spare its parent ITV. For example:
{{quote| '''Harry''': If you enjoyed the BBC's ''Who Do You Think You Are''? you may be interested in ITV's ''You Don't Know You're Born''...[[Follow the Leader|which is]] '''[[Follow the Leader|the same]].'''}}
{{quote|'''Harry''': If you enjoyed the BBC's ''Who Do You Think You Are''? you may be interested in ITV's ''You Don't Know You're Born''...[[Follow the Leader|which is]] '''[[Follow the Leader|the same]].'''}}
** Harry's earlier Channel Four series frequently made fun of that channel, depicting numerous run-ins with the Controller of Channel Four, who was portrayed as a child.
:* Harry's earlier Channel Four series frequently made fun of that channel, depicting numerous run-ins with the Controller of Channel Four, who was portrayed as a child.
*** Not just a child, but a ventriloquist's dummy that had the personality of a child.
::* Not just a child, but a ventriloquist's dummy that had the personality of a child.
* ''[[X-Play]]'' would occasionally jab at G4 after its [[Network Decay]], with specific references to being on the same channel as ''[[The Man Show]]''.
* ''[[X-Play]]'' would occasionally jab at G4 after its [[Network Decay]], with specific references to being on the same channel as ''[[The Man Show]]''.
* In one episode of ''[[Dirty Jobs]]'', there was an incident in a salt mine where one of the camera men narrowly avoided getting hit on the head by a large rock. One of the mine workers joked that when someone is injured to 'go for the wallet first.' Cue Mike Rowe's reply "He's a camera man. For the ''Discovery Channel.'' There's nothing in his wallet."
* In one episode of ''[[Dirty Jobs]]'', there was an incident in a salt mine where one of the camera men narrowly avoided getting hit on the head by a large rock. One of the mine workers joked that when someone is injured to 'go for the wallet first.' Cue Mike Rowe's reply "He's a camera man. For the ''Discovery Channel.'' There's nothing in his wallet."
** Also, this fun exchange:
** Also, this fun exchange:
{{quote| '''Dairy Farmer:''' Yeah, you just want to bend over right there.<br />
{{quote|'''Dairy Farmer:''' Yeah, you just want to bend over right there.
'''Mike:''' Just bend over and get ready for it?<br />
'''Mike:''' Just bend over and get ready for it?
'''Dairy Famer:''' Yup. That's not a problem?<br />
'''Dairy Famer:''' Yup. That's not a problem?
'''Mike:''' Sir, I've been in television so long, I'm a pro at [[Getting Crap Past the Radar|bending over and taking it.]] }}
'''Mike:''' Sir, I've been in television so long, I'm a pro at [[Getting Crap Past the Radar|bending over and taking it.]] }}
* Something similar happened on ''[[Destination Truth]].'' Josh Gates is browsing through a marketplace in Turkey (I believe) and sees a beautiful rug. The shop owner tells him the price and Josh looks surprised. They then cut to him looking at much smaller rugs, roughly the size of a sheet of paper (the shop owner suggests using them under a telephone,) and Josh says "I work on cable, my friend, this is all I can afford." He never explicitly mentions Syfy, but the implication is there.
* Something similar happened on ''[[Destination Truth]].'' Josh Gates is browsing through a marketplace in Turkey (I believe) and sees a beautiful rug. The shop owner tells him the price and Josh looks surprised. They then cut to him looking at much smaller rugs, roughly the size of a sheet of paper (the shop owner suggests using them under a telephone,) and Josh says "I work on cable, my friend, this is all I can afford." He never explicitly mentions Syfy, but the implication is there.
* While presenting the Best Animated Feature nominees at the 2009 [[Academy Awards]], [[Jack Black]] explains to co-presenter Jennifer Aniston his secret to success when it comes to making money at voice acting:
* While presenting the Best Animated Feature nominees at the 2009 [[Academy Award]]s, [[Jack Black]] explains to co-presenter Jennifer Aniston his secret to success when it comes to making money at voice acting:
{{quote| '''Jack Black''': Each year I do one [[Dreamworks Animation]] [[Kung Fu Panda|project]], then I take all the money to the Oscars and bet it on [[Pixar]].}}
{{quote|'''Jack Black''': Each year I do one [[Dreamworks Animation]] [[Kung Fu Panda|project]], then I take all the money to the Oscars and bet it on [[Pixar]].}}
** [[Laser-Guided Karma|And the winner]]? ''[[WALL-E]]''. (to which Black jumped and cheered...)
:* [[Laser-Guided Karma|And the winner]]? ''[[WALL-E]]''. (to which Black jumped and cheered...)
*** What was especially funny about the moment, though, is that one of the people who laughed hardest when he made this joke was...Jeffrey Katzenberg.
::* What was especially funny about the moment, though, is that one of the people who laughed hardest when he made this joke was...Jeffrey Katzenberg.
* While we're on the topic of the Oscars, after the 2008 show played a montage of movies addressing the social issues of their time (in a very "look how awesome we are for doing this" tone):
* While we're on the topic of the Oscars, after the 2008 show played a montage of movies addressing the social issues of their time (in a very "look how awesome we are for doing this" tone):
{{quote| '''Jon Stewart''': [[Sarcasm Mode|And none of those things were a problem ever again]].}}
{{quote|'''Jon Stewart''': [[Sarcasm Mode|And none of those things were a problem ever again]].}}
** John Oliver's segment on the 78th academy awards where he says they managed to move past the dark clouds of failure from the previous year (the one Jon Stewart hosted).
:* John Oliver's segment on the 78th academy awards where he says they managed to move past the dark clouds of failure from the previous year (the one Jon Stewart hosted).
* In the [[Spike Milligan]] series ''Q6'' (1975), the first episode features several digs at the BBC's security guards, the "crummy wardrobe department" and the high prices in the canteen.
* In the [[Spike Milligan]] series ''Q6'' (1975), the first episode features several digs at the BBC's security guards, the "crummy wardrobe department" and the high prices in the canteen.
* ''[[The Goodies]]'' contains numerous swipes at the BBC, most notably in the episodes "Alternative Roots" and "The End", during which a service announcement warns of "cutbacks of a hundred percent" - and the screen immediately goes black!
* ''[[The Goodies]]'' contains numerous swipes at the BBC, most notably in the episodes "Alternative Roots" and "The End", during which a service announcement warns of "cutbacks of a hundred percent" - and the screen immediately goes black!
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* In his show ''[[No Reservations]]'', celebrity chef Anthony Bourdain frequently pokes fun at his producers and The Travel Network.
* In his show ''[[No Reservations]]'', celebrity chef Anthony Bourdain frequently pokes fun at his producers and The Travel Network.
** Although compared to the absolute ''demolishing'' of [[Food Network]] in his book, ''A Cook's Tour'' (which was funded by the network in question), Bourdain is pratically complimentary.
** Although compared to the absolute ''demolishing'' of [[Food Network]] in his book, ''A Cook's Tour'' (which was funded by the network in question), Bourdain is pratically complimentary.
* ''[[The Soup]]'' takes sooooooooo many jabs at [[Main/Ptitle 4 hhloid 7|E!]] They even have a segment dedicated to mocking E! shows called "Let's take some E!"
* ''[[The Soup]]'' takes sooooooooo many jabs at [[E!]] They even have a segment dedicated to mocking E! shows called "Let's take some E!"
** Also a staple of ''[[Chelsea Lately]]''. Chelsea Handler frequently ridiculed the network president, even while she was dating him.
** Also a staple of ''[[Chelsea Lately]]''. Chelsea Handler frequently ridiculed the network president, even while she was dating him.
* An episode of [[Family Matters]] had Carl passive aggressively chewed out by his wife for liking [[The Three Stooges]], who essentially calls him childish and sadistic for liking a show about people getting hurt. His nephew Richie even says that the show was too juvenile for him. Saying this while The Three Stooges is essentially the grandfather of sitcoms (including Family Matters) and is practically responsible for physical comedy as a whole. Even hypocritical considering how much physical comedy Family Matters itself uses.
* An episode of ''[[Family Matters]]'' had Carl passive-aggressively chewed out by his wife for liking [[The Three Stooges]], and essentially calls him childish and sadistic for liking a show about people getting hurt. His nephew Richie even says that the show was too juvenile for him. Saying this while The Three Stooges is essentially the grandfather of sitcoms (including ''Family Matters'') and is practically responsible for physical comedy as a whole. Even hypocritical considering how much physical comedy ''Family Matters'' itself used.
* In [[Talkin Bout Your Generation]], host [[Shaun Micallef]] makes unkind remarks about the Ten network a few times; once, he [[Lampshade Hanging|lampshaded]] this by miming biting his hand afterwards.
* In ''[[Talkin Bout Your Generation]]'', host [[Shaun Micallef]] makes unkind remarks about the Ten network a few times; once, he [[Lampshade Hanging|lampshaded]] this by miming biting his hand afterwards.
* When he was a panelist on [[Match Game]], Richard Dawson used to quip that his [[Family Feud]] was the most popular show in Guam.
* When he was a panelist on ''[[Match Game]]'', Richard Dawson used to quip that his ''[[Family Feud]]'' was the most popular show in Guam.
* The [[Too Good to Last]] game show ''Clash'' (Ha!/Comedy Central) had Billy Kimball addressing a discrepency "because if we don't, we're going to get a letter from our viewer."
* The [[Too Good to Last]] game show ''Clash'' (Ha!/Comedy Central) had Billy Kimball addressing a discrepency "because if we don't, we're going to get a letter from our viewer."
* A 1971 episode of ''The Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour'' featured an opera version of [[All in The Family]] with a completely different cast playing the Bunkers and Stivics, with the plotline having the CBS censor being invited for dinner. The CBS censor was played by Carroll O'Connor.
* A 1971 episode of ''The Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour'' featured an opera version of ''[[All in The Family]]'' with a completely different cast playing the Bunkers and Stivics, with the plotline having the CBS censor being invited for dinner. The CBS censor was played by Carroll O'Connor.
* Satirical BBC panel game ''[[Have I Got News for You]]'' does this a lot. One of the most notable occasions was in the late 1990s when the BBC director-general John Birt banned BBC programs from discussing rumours that politician [[Peter Mandelson]] (a close friend of Birt) was gay; this act by Birt was widely regarded as an abuse of Birt's position and clear bias towards a friend who was otherwise an obvious target for satirists. Viewers eagerly awaited the first show after this became public, to see if the show would break the BBC's rules. Early on, guest Jackie Mason made a reference about Mandelson, and soon everyone else was at it, so the entire show became an attack on Mandelson's hypocrisy and Birt's attempt to get the BBC to cover for his friend.
* Satirical BBC panel game ''[[Have I Got News for You]]'' does this a lot. One of the most notable occasions was in the late 1990s when the BBC director-general John Birt banned BBC programs from discussing rumours that politician [[Peter Mandelson]] (a close friend of Birt) was gay; this act by Birt was widely regarded as an abuse of Birt's position and clear bias towards a friend who was otherwise an obvious target for satirists. Viewers eagerly awaited the first show after this became public, to see if the show would break the BBC's rules. Early on, guest Jackie Mason made a reference about Mandelson, and soon everyone else was at it, so the entire show became an attack on Mandelson's hypocrisy and Birt's attempt to get the BBC to cover for his friend.
* [[Eric Idle]]'s post-[[Monty Python]] sketch show [[Rutland Weekend Television]] was un-necessarily crippled by a miniscule budget grnted by a parsimonious BBC. Idle, Innes, Woolf and Batley ended the first series on a bitter spoof song about the mean and miserly attitude of the BBC, where the male characters sat naked on a row of stools in a bare studio, with only minmal modesty-saving towels (Gwen Taylor was absent for this one).
* [[Eric Idle]]'s post-''[[Monty Python]]'' sketch show ''[[Rutland Weekend Television]]'' was un-necessarily crippled by a miniscule budget granted by a parsimonious BBC. Idle, Innes, Woolf and Batley ended the first series on a bitter spoof song about the mean and miserly attitude of the BBC, where the male characters sat naked on a row of stools in a bare studio, with only minmal modesty-saving towels (Gwen Taylor was absent for this one).
{{quote| ''Hello, I bet you're wondering why we're here/Sitting on our bums, without a stitch of gear/For as it happens, the budget has expired/And everything's gone back to the place from whence it's hired...''}}
{{quote|''Hello, I bet you're wondering why we're here/Sitting on our bums, without a stitch of gear/For as it happens, the budget has expired/And everything's gone back to the place from whence it's hired...''}}
* An episode of ''[[The Mighty Boosh]]'' (made by the BBC) has Howard watching a bland, seven-hour documentary about an obscure film director and his [[True Art Is Incomprehensible|incomprehensible]] [[Le Film Artistique|works]]... on BBC Four. They got to use the real BBC Four logo.
* An episode of ''[[The Mighty Boosh]]'' (made by the BBC) has Howard watching a bland, seven-hour documentary about an obscure film director and his [[True Art Is Incomprehensible|incomprehensible]] [[Le Film Artistique|works]]... on BBC Four. They got to use the real BBC Four logo.
* ''[[Boy Meets World]]'' delivered a really big [[Take That]] at ABC for moving the show's timeslot. It happens in the episode where Cory and Topanga are babysitting a kid and are discussing his bedtime:
* ''[[Boy Meets World]]'' delivered a really big [[Take That]] at ABC for moving the show's timeslot. It happens in the episode where Cory and Topanga are babysitting a kid and are discussing his bedtime:
{{quote| '''Kid:''' At least let me watch my favorite show. It's on right now!<br />
{{quote|'''Kid:''' At least let me watch my favorite show. It's on right now!
'''Topanga:''' But it's 9:30, I know you don't stay up past nine.<br />
'''Topanga:''' But it's 9:30, I know you don't stay up past nine.
'''Kid:''' It used to be on at 8:30 but this year they moved it to 9:30, those idiots.<br />
'''Kid:''' It used to be on at 8:30 but this year they moved it to 9:30, those idiots.
'''Cory:''' Wait a minute they moved that show to 9:30, why?<br />
'''Cory:''' Wait a minute, they moved that show to 9:30? Why?
'''Kid:''' No one knows!<br />
'''Kid:''' No one knows!
'''Cory:''' Well was it doing badly at 8:30?<br />
'''Cory:''' Well was it doing badly at 8:30?
'''Kid:''' No!<br />
'''Kid:''' No!
'''Cory:''' Well why didn't they leave it alone?<br />
'''Cory:''' Well why didn't they leave it alone?
'''Kid:''' There're trying to kill it! There're trying to kill it!<br />
'''Kid:''' There're trying to kill it! There're trying to kill it!
'''Cory:''' Those are bad bad people. }}
'''Cory:''' Those are bad, bad people. }}
** ABC took notice and changed the timeslot back not long after this.
:* ABC took notice and changed the timeslot back not long after this.
* One of the reasons ''The [[Dana Carvey]] Show" was cancelled was because Dana mocked his sponsors so much that they stopped backing his show.
* One of the reasons ''The [[Dana Carvey]] Show'' was cancelled was because Dana mocked his sponsors so much that they stopped backing his show.
* The 2011 episode of [[Saturday Night Live]] with guest host [[Miley Cyrus]] had a sketch called "[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kZdIFRKeSso&feature=results_video&playnext=1&list=PL19B7160BD391FE59 Disney Channel Acting School]", where Miley (dressed in an exaggerated [[Hannah Montana]] costume and poofy hair) and [[Raven-Symone]] (played by [[Kenan and Kel|Kenan Thompson]]) host an infomercial for the school. The sketch parodies the writing, wardrobe and comedic devices [[Disney Channel]] [[Kid Com|Kid Coms]] such as ''[[Hannah Montana]], ''[[That's So Raven]]'' and ''[[Wizards of Waverly Place]]'' use regularly.
* The 2011 episode of ''[[Saturday Night Live]]'' with guest host [[Miley Cyrus]] had a sketch called "[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kZdIFRKeSso&feature=results_video&playnext=1&list=PL19B7160BD391FE59 Disney Channel Acting School]", where Miley (dressed in an exaggerated [[Hannah Montana]] costume and poofy hair) and [[Raven-Symone]] (played by [[Kenan and Kel|Kenan Thompson]]) host an infomercial for the school. The sketch parodies the writing, wardrobe and comedic devices [[Disney Channel]] [[Kid Com]]s such as ''[[Hannah Montana]], ''[[That's So Raven]]'' and ''[[Wizards of Waverly Place]]'' use regularly.
* [[Psych]], which airs on USA (an NBC affiliate) had this gem:
* [[Psych]], which airs on USA (an NBC affiliate) had this gem:
{{quote| '''Director of show in show''': They better make great TV, okay? Because I sold this to NBC. NBC! They make classics like [[Friends]] and...uh...um...uh...}}
{{quote|'''Director of show in show''': They better make great TV, okay? Because I sold this to NBC. NBC! They make classics like [[Friends]] and...uh...um...uh...}}
* The made-for-tv movie ''[[Special Bulletin]]'', which aired on NBC, featured a terrorist remarking "NBC would kill its mother for this footage!"
* The made-for-tv movie ''[[Special Bulletin]]'', which aired on NBC, featured a terrorist remarking "NBC would kill its mother for this footage!"
* ''Babylon 5'': At the start of season 2, Executive Meddling made the creators sex up Ivanova's appearance. She started wearing redder lipstick and had her hair loose instead of pulled back. When Garibaldi came out of his coma and returned to duty, he commented on her 'new look'. Ivanova snapped back "With everything that's been going on around here I'd think you'd have other things on your mind besides my look!" Take That, Executive Meddlers!
* ''Babylon 5'': At the start of season 2, Executive Meddling made the creators sex up Ivanova's appearance. She started wearing redder lipstick and had her hair loose instead of pulled back. When Garibaldi came out of his coma and returned to duty, he commented on her 'new look'. Ivanova snapped back "With everything that's been going on around here I'd think you'd have other things on your mind besides my look!" Take That, Executive Meddlers!
* An unusual case: ABC has been owned by The Walt Disney Company since 1995, and in the Tom Bergeron era of ''[[America's Funniest Home Videos]]'' (which started at the [[Turn of the Millennium]]), the grand prizes each season are usually related to the [[Disney Theme Parks]] or the company's other vacation ventures. The show usually sends Bergeron to the venues in question to spend chunks of his host segments shilling them. Aside from those special episodes, however, Disney hasn't stopped the show from airing home videos that cast the parks in a less-than-ideal light (costumed characters falling off of parade floats or scaring toddlers, kids and adults being unpleasantly surprised by Epcot's famous "leapfrog fountains", etc.), and in one 2005 finale Bergeron joked that when his daughters are at Disney World, the three things they're most eager to see are "Mickey, Minnie, and Daddy's Wallet."
* An unusual case: ABC has been owned by The Walt Disney Company since 1995, and in the Tom Bergeron era of ''[[America's Funniest Home Videos]]'' (which started at the [[Turn of the Millennium]]), the grand prizes each season are usually related to the [[Disney Theme Parks]] or the company's other vacation ventures. The show usually sends Bergeron to the venues in question to spend chunks of his host segments shilling them. Aside from those special episodes, however, Disney hasn't stopped the show from airing home videos that cast the parks in a less-than-ideal light (costumed characters falling off of parade floats or scaring toddlers, kids and adults being unpleasantly surprised by Epcot's famous "leapfrog fountains", etc.), and in one 2005 finale Bergeron joked that when his daughters are at Disney World, the three things they're most eager to see are "Mickey, Minnie, and Daddy's Wallet."



== Music ==
== Music ==
* The [[Dead Kennedys]] turned this into a [[Crowning Moment of Awesome]] with their legendary performance of "Pull My Strings" at the Bay Area Music Awards in 1980.
* The [[Dead Kennedys]] turned this into a [[Crowning Moment of Awesome]] with their legendary performance of "Pull My Strings" at the Bay Area Music Awards in 1980.
* The back cover of The Replacements' ''Let It Be'' is a picture of graffiti the band members had written on a door, including "Twin/Tone eats slotty crap" (or possibly "...''sloth'' crap"). The Replacements were signed to the label Twin/Tone at the time, and what makes it even funnier is that the Twin/Tone logo is positioned directly beneath that message.
* The back cover of The Replacements' ''Let It Be'' is a picture of graffiti the band members had written on a door, including "Twin/Tone eats slotty crap" (or possibly "...''sloth'' crap"). The Replacements were signed to the label Twin/Tone at the time, and what makes it even funnier is that the Twin/Tone logo is positioned directly beneath that message.
** The rarity "Lookin' For Ya" (which they would re-work into "Love Lines") ends with Paul Westerberg ad-libbing "Keep your riches, give me a Budweiser!". This is because it was originally recorded for ''Trackin' Up The North'', a compilation put together as part of a "Rags To Riches" battle of the bands co-sponsored by Miller High Life.
** The rarity "Lookin' For Ya" (which they would re-work into "Love Lines") ends with Paul Westerberg ad-libbing "Keep your riches, give me a Budweiser!". This is because it was originally recorded for ''Trackin' Up The North'', a compilation put together as part of a "Rags To Riches" battle of the bands co-sponsored by Miller High Life.
* Mr. Bungle were apparently doubtful as to whether or not their major label debut would even be released: In one line of "Carousel" they ask "Will Warner Brothers put this record on the shelf?" (although, possibly as a way of [[Getting Crap Past the Radar]], the liner notes make the blatantly false claim that the lyric is "[[Grease|look at me I'm Sandra Dee]])".
* Mr. Bungle were apparently doubtful as to whether or not their major label debut would even be released: In one line of "Carousel" they ask "Will Warner Brothers put this record on the shelf?" (although, possibly as a way of [[Getting Crap Past the Radar]], the liner notes make the blatantly false claim that the lyric is "[[Grease|look at me I'm Sandra Dee]])".
** [[Devo]] was also known to mock Warner Brothers, and the music industry in general. Their promotional videos included characters that embodied every record executive stereotype: Rod Rooter, a pimply manager who didn't get Devo ("I can forgive you guys for being artists, but I can't forgive you for being stupid!" "Look at the airplay charts! No, no Devo!") and Daddy-Know-It-All, the boss of Big Entertainment who orders Rod to keep Devo in line.
** [[Devo]] was also known to mock Warner Brothers, and the music industry in general. Their promotional videos included characters that embodied every record executive stereotype: Rod Rooter, a pimply manager who didn't get Devo ("I can forgive you guys for being artists, but I can't forgive you for being stupid!" "Look at the airplay charts! No, no Devo!") and Daddy-Know-It-All, the boss of Big Entertainment who orders Rod to keep Devo in line.



== Newspaper Comics ==
== Newspaper Comics ==
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** Pastis has mocked his syndicate several times as well.
** Pastis has mocked his syndicate several times as well.
* Gary Trudeau, creator of ''Doonesbury'', has slapped at his employer several times for making him submit strips six weeks in advance, with characters saying things along the lines of "even though the election happened last week, we don't know who won because this strip was submitted six weeks ago."
* Gary Trudeau, creator of ''Doonesbury'', has slapped at his employer several times for making him submit strips six weeks in advance, with characters saying things along the lines of "even though the election happened last week, we don't know who won because this strip was submitted six weeks ago."



== Radio ==
== Radio ==
* The "Radio 3" episode of ''[[Absolute Power (Radio)|Absolute Power]]'' (on Radio 4) was full of digs at [[The BBC]] including "In the BBC ratings are like sex; of course they're not important, just as long as you're getting some!"
* The "Radio 3" episode of ''[[Absolute Power (radio)|Absolute Power]]'' (on Radio 4) was full of digs at [[The BBC]] including "In the BBC ratings are like sex; of course they're not important, just as long as you're getting some!"
** ''Absolute Power'''s [[Spin-Off|parent show]], ''In The Red'' and sequels were ''made'' of this trope; BBC radio comedy dramas about an inept BBC radio journalist and his unpleasant BBC bosses.
** ''Absolute Power'''s [[Spin-Off|parent show]], ''In The Red'' and sequels were ''made'' of this trope; BBC radio comedy dramas about an inept BBC radio journalist and his unpleasant BBC bosses.
* In Season One of ''[[Old Harry's Game|Old Harrys Game]]'', Thomas persuades Gary to lead a rebellion of the demons. Two demons keep insisting they need mission statements and brightly-coloured charts.
* In Season One of ''[[Old Harry's Game|Old Harrys Game]]'', Thomas persuades Gary to lead a rebellion of the demons. Two demons keep insisting they need mission statements and brightly-coloured charts.
{{quote| '''Thomas''': Who are those two?<br />
{{quote|'''Thomas''': Who are those two?
'''Gary''': They're the demons in charge of torturing former BBC executives.<br />
'''Gary''': They're the demons in charge of torturing former BBC executives.
'''Thomas''': I think they've gone native. }}
'''Thomas''': I think they've gone native. }}
* ''[[I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue]]'' often made fun of the BBC. In particular Tim and Graeme spent the early 2000s taking potshots at the Controller of [[BBC 2]], Jane "''[[The Goodies]]'' will be repeated over my dead body" Root. After all, she started it.
* ''[[I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue]]'' often made fun of the BBC. In particular Tim and Graeme spent the early 2000s taking potshots at the Controller of [[BBC 2]], Jane "''[[The Goodies]]'' will be repeated over my dead body" Root. After all, she started it.
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* ''[[Car Talk]]'' has an inversion via [[Self-Deprecation]]: the [[Stinger]] for the show is inevitably something to the effect of "And even though [something indicating deep disapproval/disappointment happens] every time ''we'' say it, this is NPR, National Public Radio." In other words, they compliment their network by calling themselves unworthy of it.
* ''[[Car Talk]]'' has an inversion via [[Self-Deprecation]]: the [[Stinger]] for the show is inevitably something to the effect of "And even though [something indicating deep disapproval/disappointment happens] every time ''we'' say it, this is NPR, National Public Radio." In other words, they compliment their network by calling themselves unworthy of it.
* Radio 4's statistics programme ''More Or Less'', reporting that one of their regular mathematician guests was appearing on BBC One's ''[[Wipeout 2008|Winter Wipeout]]'':
* Radio 4's statistics programme ''More Or Less'', reporting that one of their regular mathematician guests was appearing on BBC One's ''[[Wipeout 2008|Winter Wipeout]]'':
{{quote| '''Tim Hartford''': I hadn't previously seen the show myself, but I now realise it's a bit like ''[[Its A Knockout]]'', but without the high philosophical concepts. After watching it, I had one question for David: ''Why?'' }}
{{quote|'''Tim Hartford''': I hadn't previously seen the show myself, but I now realise it's a bit like ''[[Its A Knockout]]'', but without the high philosophical concepts. After watching it, I had one question for David: ''Why?'' }}


== Print Media ==
* ''[[MAD]]'' is well-known for its satires of movies, television, and other forms of media, and it very often lampoons works produced by Warner Communications, its parent company.


== Video Games ==
== Video Games ==
* In the Los Angeles mission of the Japanese Campaign in ''[[Command and Conquer|Red Alert 3]]'', the player can (and is actively encouraged with rewards) blow up the EA-Los Angeles building. Upon its destruction, a Japanese soldier will yell "''Your ill-begotten products shall taint the shelves no more!''"
* In the Los Angeles mission of the Japanese Campaign in ''[[Command & Conquer|Red Alert 3]]'', the player can (and is actively encouraged with rewards) blow up the EA-Los Angeles building. Upon its destruction, a Japanese soldier will yell "''Your ill-begotten products shall taint the shelves no more!''"
** ''[[The Simpsons Game]]'' was also filled with jokes directed at EA.
** ''[[The Simpsons Game]]'' was also filled with jokes directed at EA.
* The first thing one saw upon booting up ''[[Conkers Bad Fur Day]]'' for the N64 was the typical N64 logo...which is immediately ripped apart by Conker with a ''[[Chainsaw Good|chainsaw]]'', to be replaced by the Rareware logo. In all fairness, this is probably a good first indicator of what someone seduced by the game's disarming appearances is actually in for...
* The first thing one saw upon booting up ''[[Conker's Bad Fur Day]]'' for the N64 was the typical N64 logo...which is immediately ripped apart by Conker with a ''[[Chainsaw Good|chainsaw]]'', to be replaced by the Rareware logo. In all fairness, this is probably a good first indicator of what someone seduced by the game's disarming appearances is actually in for...
* Reggie Fils-Aime of Nintendo considers the ''[[Blur (video game)|Blur]]'' commercial, a [[Take That]] at ''[[Mario Kart]]'', to be this [http://www.nintendoeverything.com/43116/ on the basis] that the game's publisher [[Activision]] is also doing the new ''[[GoldenEye 007 (2010 video game)|GoldenEye]]'' game exclusively for Nintendo.
* Reggie Fils-Aime of Nintendo considers the ''[[Blur (video game)|Blur]]'' commercial, a [[Take That]] at ''[[Mario Kart]]'', to be this [https://web.archive.org/web/20100824135627/http://www.nintendoeverything.com/43116/ on the basis] that the game's publisher [[Activision]] is also doing the new ''[[GoldenEye 007 (2010 video game)|GoldenEye]]'' game exclusively for Nintendo.
* [[Dragon Age]], Human Noble origin: [[Baldur's Gate|"Giant rats? It's like the start of every bad adventure tale my grandfather used to tell."]]
* [[Dragon Age]], Human Noble origin: [[Baldur's Gate|"Giant rats? It's like the start of every bad adventure tale my grandfather used to tell."]]
* Strong Bad does this quite often towards [[Telltale Games]] in ''[[Strong Bad's Cool Game for Attractive People|Strong Bads Cool Game for Attractive People]]'' and its making-of mockumentary ''Behind The Bad'' (and eventually carried over in ''[[Poker Night At the Inventory]]''), usually complaining about how they never follow his idea of the "perfect" Strong Bad video game. This, however, is subverted near the end of "8-Bit Is Enough" when the developers [[Throw the Dog a Bone|finally made an albeit lo-res polygon render of a concept sketch from Strong Bad for the episode's final battle]], [["Hell Yes!" Moment|and Strong Bad couldn't be more happy about it.]]
* Strong Bad does this quite often towards [[Telltale Games]] in ''[[Strong Bad's Cool Game for Attractive People|Strong Bads Cool Game for Attractive People]]'' and its making-of mockumentary ''Behind The Bad'' (and eventually carried over in ''[[Poker Night At the Inventory]]''), usually complaining about how they never follow his idea of the "perfect" Strong Bad video game. This, however, is subverted near the end of "8-Bit Is Enough" when the developers [[Throw the Dog a Bone|finally made an albeit lo-res polygon render of a concept sketch from Strong Bad for the episode's final battle]], [["Hell Yes!" Moment|and Strong Bad couldn't be more happy about it.]]
* Online game makers Nitrome did this and a bit of [[Self-Deprecation]] with their 100th game, ''Nitrome Must Die''. Example: in one level, the whiteboard in the background shows ideas for a new game... with a deadline of 8 hours.
* Online game makers Nitrome did this and a bit of [[Self-Deprecation]] with their 100th game, ''Nitrome Must Die''. Example: in one level, the whiteboard in the background shows ideas for a new game... with a deadline of 8 hours.
* More a case of taking a shot at ''former'' employers; Koji Igarashi's messy divorce from Konami is well known, and when he started his own company, ArtPlay (after raising $5.5 million on Kickstarter) he released ''[[Bloodstained: Ritual of the Night]]'', a sort of [[Spiritual Successor]] to ''[[Castlevania]]''. Just to troll his former employers, the game includes a scene were the hero fights two demonic slot machines, a jab at the business Konami has been in since abandoning ''Castlevania''.


== Web Comics ==

* Most of the jokes in ''[[The Order of the Stick]]'', especially in the first 200 or so comics, are at the expense of ''[[Dungeons & Dragons]]'' or its publisher, [[Wizards of the Coast]]. Rich Burlew, the author, is a freelance game designer who mostly works for Wizards on D&D-related projects. An early strip based on Wizards' slightly bizarre copyright policy is actually titled [http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0032.html Biting the Hand That Feeds Me].
== Webcomics ==
** The ''OotS'' strip in the last three issues of ''[[Dragon (magazine)|Dragon]]'' magazine had the Order discover the dragon from the cover of issue 1, whose subsequent career mirrored that of the magazine itself. The second of these strips was titled "Claw/Claw/Bite The Hand That Feeds Me".
* [[Web Comic]] example: Most of the jokes in ''[[The Order of the Stick|Order of the Stick]]'', especially in the first 200 or so comics, are at the expense of ''[[Dungeons and Dragons]]'' or its publisher, [[Wizards of the Coast]]. Rich Burlew, the author, is a freelance game designer who mostly works for Wizards on D&D-related projects. An early strip based on Wizards' slightly bizarre copyright policy is actually titled [http://www.giantitp.com/comics/oots0032.html Biting the Hand That Feeds Me].
** The ''OOTS'' strip in the last three issues of ''[[Dragon]]'' magazine had the Order discover the dragon from the cover of issue 1, whose subsequent career mirrored that of the magazine itself. The second of these strips was titled Claw/Claw/Bite The Hand That Feeds Me.



== Web Original ==
== Web Original ==
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* [http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/video/2009/may/14/david-mitchell-soapbox This episode] of David Mitchell's Soap Box. (Originally the video went out as a podcast sponsored by Bulldog Natural Grooming.)
* [http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/video/2009/may/14/david-mitchell-soapbox This episode] of David Mitchell's Soap Box. (Originally the video went out as a podcast sponsored by Bulldog Natural Grooming.)
** Later episodes have a [[Running Gag]] that David can't remember the name of the company that is sponsoring his podcasts. Eventually Bulldog got in on the joke by announcing "Robert Webb's Soapbox".
** Later episodes have a [[Running Gag]] that David can't remember the name of the company that is sponsoring his podcasts. Eventually Bulldog got in on the joke by announcing "Robert Webb's Soapbox".
* ''[[Psycomedia]]'' hosts Tim and Ben both attended [[Oxbridge|Oxford University]] but many episodes focus on the bizarre research of their teachers and other faculty members. Lovingly. And not libellously.
* ''[[Psycomedia]]'' hosts Tim and Ben both attended [[Oxbridge|Oxford University]] but many episodes focus on the bizarre research of their teachers and other faculty members. Lovingly. And not libellously.
* According to [[Todd in the Shadows]], [[Lady Gaga]]'s "Telephone" has more advertisements than [[That Guy With The Glasses]].com. And "I've realised something about my new workplace. YOU ARE ALL A BUNCH OF NERDS! NERDS! ''NERDS!''"
* According to [[Todd in the Shadows]], [[Lady Gaga]]'s "Telephone" has more advertisements than [[That Guy With The Glasses]].com. And "I've realised something about my new workplace. YOU ARE ALL A BUNCH OF NERDS! NERDS! ''NERDS!''"
** Continues in [[Atop the Fourth Wall|Linkara's]] review of KISS comics. When asking Todd if he'd like to co-review after giving the history of KISS, he just laughs at the thought of him reviewing a comic. "I forget how nerdy this site is." Linkara didn't look pleased.
** Continues in [[Atop the Fourth Wall|Linkara's]] review of KISS comics. When asking Todd if he'd like to co-review after giving the history of KISS, he just laughs at the thought of him reviewing a comic. "I forget how nerdy this site is." Linkara didn't look pleased.
** In "The Sexual Awakening Of The Human Nerd" by [[The Nostalgia Chick]]'s supporting cast, Dr. Tease interviews the other reviewers, describing them as "These creatures - I mean, humans - I mean, nerds".
** In "The Sexual Awakening Of The Human Nerd" by [[The Nostalgia Chick]]'s supporting cast, Dr. Tease interviews the other reviewers, describing them as "These creatures - I mean, humans - I mean, nerds".
* [[Zero Punctuation|Yahtzee]] has an infrequent habit of calling the Escapist out on having him play and review games he'd rather not. Its not exactly suprising, considering he [[Hates Everyone Equally|he insults bascially everyone else]].
* [[Zero Punctuation|Yahtzee]] has an infrequent habit of calling the Escapist out on having him play and review games he'd rather not. Its not exactly suprising, considering he [[Hates Everyone Equally|he insults basically everyone else]].



== Western Animation ==
== Western Animation ==
* ''[[The Simpsons]]'' has a long history of poking fun at the [[FOX]] network.
* ''[[The Simpsons]]'' and ''[[Family Guy]]'' both have histories of poking fun at the [[Fox]] network. Probably the most striking example was [http://www.hulu.com/watch/41275/family-guy-canceled the first scene in the first episode of ''Family Guy'' after it had been revived from cancellation], where Peter recites the long list of every prime-time show that Fox cancelled after ''Family Guy''.
** There is a list [http://www.snpp.com/guides/foxswipe.html here] of many of the jabs at Fox. Specific ''Simpsons'' examples:
** There is a list [https://web.archive.org/web/20131108070159/http://www.snpp.com/guides/foxswipe.html here] of many of the jabs at Fox. Specific ''Simpsons'' examples:
*** ''The Simpsons'' reached a disturbing new nadir in its "MoneyBART" episode, its [[Couch Gag]] (storyboarded by subversive street artist [[Banksy]]) [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DX1iplQQJTo depicting] the production of ''Simpsons'' episodes and merchandise taking place in a toxic sweat shop within a bulding shaped like the 20th Century Fox [[Vanity Plate]]. [http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-11510513 This BBC report] claims the sequence "led to delays, disputes over broadcast standards and a threatened walk out by the animation department."
*** ''The Simpsons'' reached a disturbing new nadir in its "MoneyBART" episode, its [[Couch Gag]] (storyboarded by subversive street artist [[Banksy]]) [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DX1iplQQJTo depicting] the production of ''Simpsons'' episodes and merchandise taking place in a toxic sweat shop within a bulding shaped like the 20th Century Fox [[Vanity Plate]]. [http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-11510513 This BBC report] claims the sequence "led to delays, disputes over broadcast standards and a threatened walk out by the animation department."
*** Planning to videotape an apparent alien visitor (and taking a swipe at Fox's [[Documentary of Lies|"Alien Autopsy: Fact or Fiction"]] broadcast), giving us the second page quote.
*** Planning to videotape an apparent alien visitor (and taking a swipe at Fox's [[Documentary of Lies|"Alien Autopsy: Fact or Fiction"]] broadcast), giving us the second page quote.
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*** An even better example was in [[The Movie]]: During one of the scenes, a [[Commercial Pop-Up]] crawler advertising the Fox networks starts moving across the bottom of the screen, ending with "Yes, we even advertise during movies now".
*** An even better example was in [[The Movie]]: During one of the scenes, a [[Commercial Pop-Up]] crawler advertising the Fox networks starts moving across the bottom of the screen, ending with "Yes, we even advertise during movies now".
*** Also there was Krusty bemoaning his good-for-nothing half-brother Luke Perry:
*** Also there was Krusty bemoaning his good-for-nothing half-brother Luke Perry:
{{quote| '''Lisa''': But he's a big star!<br />
{{quote|'''Lisa''': But he's a big star!
'''Krusty''':Yeah...[with disgust] on ''Fox''. }}
'''Krusty''':Yeah...[with disgust] on ''Fox''. }}
*** "Missionary: Impossible" begins with [[Betty White]] hosting a PBS pledge drive. At the end of the episode, she pops up again, this time hosting a pledge drive for ''Fox''. She urges viewers not to let "crude, lowbrow programming disappear from the airwaves". A ''Family Guy'' logo appears on the TV set she's standing next to.
::* "Missionary: Impossible" begins with [[Betty White]] hosting a PBS pledge drive. At the end of the episode, she pops up again, this time hosting a pledge drive for ''Fox''. She urges viewers not to let "crude, lowbrow programming disappear from the airwaves". A ''Family Guy'' logo appears on the TV set she's standing next to.
{{quote| '''Betty White''': Sure, Fox makes a fortune from advertising but it's still not enough.<br />
{{quote|'''Betty White''': Sure, Fox makes a fortune from advertising but it's still not enough.
'''Rupert Murdoch''': Not nearly enough! }}
'''Rupert Murdoch''': Not nearly enough! }}
**** That particular example is more of a swipe at ''Family Guy'' than at Fox. The rivalry between those two shows is not particularly friendly.
::* That particular example is more of a swipe at ''Family Guy'' than at Fox. The rivalry between those two shows is not particularly friendly.
**** In that same episode at the end, someone calls in pledging $10,000, and Rupert Murdoch says "You've saved my network!" Bart, hanging up the phone, says "Wouldn't be the first time."
::* In that same episode at the end, someone calls in pledging $10,000, and Rupert Murdoch says "You've saved my network!" Bart, hanging up the phone, says "Wouldn't be the first time."
*** This also ended up biting them back; in one episode they mock Butterfinger, a long-time sponsor of the show. Nestle responded by canceling their contract. Acknowledged in the next episode, where the [[Couch Gag|blackboard gag]] read "I will not bite the hand that feeds me Butterfingers."
::* This also ended up biting them back; in one episode they mock Butterfinger, a long-time sponsor of the show. Nestle responded by canceling their contract. Acknowledged in the next episode, where the [[Couch Gag|blackboard gag]] read "I will not bite the hand that feeds me Butterfingers."
*** In a flash-forward episode, set <s>[[Comic Book Time|in 2010]]</s> 15 years from now, we find out that all the programs on Fox have become porn. This happened so gradually that Marge hadn't noticed until that point in time.
::* In a flash-forward episode, set <s>[[Comic Book Time|in 2010]]</s> 15 years from now, we find out that all the programs on Fox have become porn. This happened so gradually that Marge hadn't noticed until that point in time.
*** The Road Rage episode ("Marge Simpson in: Screaming Yellow Honkers"). The family promotes NBC for its quality programming, ending with "How do we know if there's something good on now? Just change the channel", followed by Homer reading out a forced statement over the episode's credits that NBC sucks and Fox rules, under gunpoint, ending with him saying, "CBS: great," and being shot.
::* The Road Rage episode ("Marge Simpson in: Screaming Yellow Honkers"). The family promotes NBC for its quality programming, ending with "How do we know if there's something good on now? Just change the channel", followed by Homer reading out a forced statement over the episode's credits that NBC sucks and Fox rules, under gunpoint, ending with him saying, "CBS: great," and being shot.
*** "Sunday, Cruddy Sunday" has Homer and company tangling with Rupert Murdoch, who refers to himself as "the billionaire tyrant". (Murdoch was [[Self-Deprecation|actually playing himself]].)
::* "Sunday, Cruddy Sunday" has Homer and company tangling with Rupert Murdoch, who refers to himself as "the billionaire tyrant". (Murdoch was [[Self-Deprecation|actually playing himself]].)
*** Another example is when a promo for ''Joe Millionaire'' goes across the top of the screen. Homer then eats part of it, but disgustedly spits out the Fox logo.
::* Another example is when a promo for ''Joe Millionaire'' goes across the top of the screen. Homer then eats part of it, but disgustedly spits out the Fox logo.
*** In another episode, the Flanders' kids have been infected with the "Osaka Flu" going around town. Ned then asks himself why God has "forsaken" them only to have a flashback to the one time they watched ''[[Married... with Children]]'' (complete with sinister lightning).
::* In another episode, the Flanders' kids have been infected with the "Osaka Flu" going around town. Ned then asks himself why God has "forsaken" them only to have a flashback to the one time they watched ''[[Married... with Children]]'' (complete with sinister lightning).
{{quote| '''Ned''': Oh Maude, the network slogan was true! "Watch Fox and be damned for all eternity!"}}
{{quote|'''Ned''': Oh Maude, the network slogan was true! "Watch Fox and be damned for all eternity!"}}
::* In "Lisa vs. Malibu Stacy", the family criticizes Lisa's recent activism:

{{quote|'''Homer''': And we can't watch Fox because they own those chemical weapon plants in Syria.}}
*** In "Lisa vs. Malibu Stacy", the family criticizes Lisa's recent activism:
::* In "The Simpsons 138th Episode Spectacular" you may remember Troy McClure from such Fox network specials as ''Alien Nose Job'' and ''Five Fabulous Weeks of "The Chevy Chase Show"''.
{{quote| '''Homer''': And we can't watch Fox because they own those chemical weapon plants in Syria.}}
::* And in "[[Halloween Episode|Treehouse of Horror IX]]" Ed McMahon would like to remind you that the FOX special ''World's Deadliest Executions'' is brought to you by the producers of ''When Skirts Fall Off'' and ''Secrets of National Security Revealed''.

::* In ''The Simpsons Spin-Off Showcase'', Troy McClure says that FOX approached the Writers of ''The Simpsons'' to create "35 new shows" to fill a "few holes" in the schedule. Cue a poster of the FOX schedule: A slot each for ''The Simpsons'', ''[[The X-Files]]'', and ''[[Melrose Place]]'', All other slots are question marks.
*** In "The Simpsons 138th Episode Spectacular" you may remember Troy McClure from such Fox network specials as ''Alien Nose Job'' and ''Five Fabulous Weeks of "The Chevy Chase Show"''.
::* In "Simple Simpson", the family watches ''Promiscuous Idiots Island'' on Fox, the home of promiscuous idiots.
**** And in "[[Halloween Episode|Treehouse of Horror IX]]" Ed McMahon would like to remind you that the FOX special ''World's Deadliest Executions'' is brought to you by the producers of ''When Skirts Fall Off'' and ''Secrets of National Security Revealed''.
::* Plus, there was a scene in a Sideshow Bob episode where Rupert Murdoch himself (speaking with a bad Australian accent) was in jail with Bob. They actually had to ask for and GOT permission from Murdoch himself for that one. His response was apparently "[[Self-Deprecation|I would be honored to be in jail in The Simpsons]]".
*** In ''The Simpsons Spin-Off Showcase'', Troy McClure says that FOX approached the Writers of ''The Simpsons'' to create "35 new shows" to fill a "few holes" in the schedule. Cue a poster of the FOX schedule: A slot each for ''The Simpsons'', ''[[The X-Files]]'', and ''[[Melrose Place]]'', All other slots are question marks.
::* In the episode where Lisa was petitioning to have Springfield turn off all its lights so she could see an upcoming meteor shower, she complained that the only thing she could see in her telescope was the Fox satellite. The screen then cuts to a broken, falling apart satellite that's only being held up by regular party balloons.
*** In "Simple Simpson", the family watches ''Promiscuous Idiots Island'' on Fox, the home of promiscuous idiots.
::* And in the episode written by and guest starring Ricky Gervais, Fox is described as the home of the world's worst sitcoms, before Lisa points out that the show ''Mother Flippers'' (i.e. ''Trading Spouses'') is a rip-off of an [[Wife Swap|existing show]]. She is bribed with a Fox sweatshirt, but when she points out it's actually an ABC sweatshirt they throw her in the ''[[American Idol]]'' holding pen.
*** Plus, there was a scene in a Sideshow Bob episode where Rupert Murdoch himself (speaking with a bad Australian accent) was in jail with Bob. They actually had to ask for and GOT permission from Murdoch himself for that one. His response was apparently "[[Self-Deprecation|I would be honored to be in jail in The Simpsons]]".
::* Behind the Laughter: The only reason that "The Simpsons" got picked up as a show, was because Marge's hairdresser was also ''president'' of the Fox network.
*** In the episode where Lisa was petitioning to have Springfield turn off all its lights so she could see an upcoming meteor shower, she complained that the only thing she could see in her telescope was the Fox satellite. The screen then cuts to a broken, falling apart satellite that's only being held up by regular party balloons.
::* In the couch gag for "Elementary School Musical", the 22nd season premiere, a Fox executive appeared giving the Simpsons a cupcake with a candle on it to celebrate the beginning of the season. After Maggie blew out the candle, the executive took the cupcake and ate it himself.
*** And in the episode written by and guest starring Ricky Gervais, Fox is described as the home of the world's worst sitcoms, before Lisa points out that the show ''Mother Flippers'' (i.e. ''Trading Spouses'') is a rip-off of an [[Wife Swap|existing show]]. She is bribed with a Fox sweatshirt, but when she points out it's actually an ABC sweatshirt they throw her in the ''[[American Idol]]'' holding pen.
::* Subverted in another episode, when a media circus hits town, the Fox news van is very large and rolls into view while "We Are The Champions" plays.
*** Behind the Laughter: The only reason that "The Simpsons" got picked up as a show, was because Marge's hairdresser was also ''president'' of the Fox network.
::* The show did a parody of ''[[The Island of Dr. Moreau]]'' called "The Island of Dr. Hibbert." In it, Dr. Hibbert has been turning the people of Springfield into half-men/half-beasts. He himself comes out wearing a fox stole which resembles Mr. Burns, prompting Bart to say, "Ooooh, he got the Fox treatment."
*** In the couch gag for "Elementary School Musical", the 22nd season premiere, a Fox executive appeared giving the Simpsons a cupcake with a candle on it to celebrate the beginning of the season. After Maggie blew out the candle, the executive took the cupcake and ate it himself.
::* In-universe example in one episode. Krusty bad-mouths a particular drug company (I think Percodan) while being taped, then mentions "a word from our sponsor", who also happens to be the same drug company he just criticized. Cue [[Oh Crap]] moment for him.
*** Subverted in another episode, when a media circus hits town, the Fox news van is very large and rolls into view while "We Are The Champions" plays.
::* In "Sideshow Bob Roberts" Larry King is moderating in a mayoral debate. Before the debate, he addresses the audience.
*** The show did a parody of ''[[The Island of Dr. Moreau]]'' called "The Island of Dr. Hibbert." In it, Dr. Hibbert has been turning the people of Springfield into half-men/half-beasts. He himself comes out wearing a fox stole which resembles Mr. Burns, prompting Bart to say, "Ooooh, he got the Fox treatment."
{{quote|'''King''':I'm your moderator, Larry King. Now, a word to our audience: even though we're being broadcast on...Fox, there's no need for obnoxious hooting and hollering.
*** In-universe example in one episode. Krusty bad-mouths a particular drug company (I think Percodan) while being taped, then mentions "a word from our sponsor", who also happens to be the same drug company he just criticized. Cue [[Oh Crap]] moment for him.
*** In "Sideshow Bob Roberts" Larry King is moderating in a mayoral debate. Before the debate, he addresses the audience.
{{quote| '''King''':I'm your moderator, Larry King. Now, a word to our audience: even though we're being broadcast on...Fox, there's no need for obnoxious hooting and hollering.<br />
'''*Cue obnoxious hooting and hollering*''' }}
'''*Cue obnoxious hooting and hollering*''' }}
* ''[[Family Guy]]'' is no better. "What are they gonna do? Cut our budget?" Peter mused in one episode. One of the most well known instances was [https://web.archive.org/web/20090828170638/http://www.hulu.com/watch/41275/family-guy-canceled the first scene in the first episode of ''Family Guy'' after it had been revived from cancellation], where Peter recites the long list of every prime-time show that Fox cancelled after ''Family Guy''. This was revisited in the episode "Family Gay". At a horse race, the announcer rattles off the list of entrants, all of them named for recently cancelled Fox shows. Other examples include:
** ''[[Family Guy]]'': "What are they gonna do? Cut our budget?"
:* An inversion of this Trope, in the episode "Death Is a Bitch". Assigned by Death with the task of killing the cast of ''[[Dawson's Creek]]'', Peter demurs:
*** And their first episode after coming back, as previously mentioned.
{{quote|'''Peter:''' I'm not gonna kill those kids. If they die, I'll have nothing to watch on Wednesdays. ''[Glancing at the camera, and breaking out in a nervous grin]'' Other than the fine programs on Fox.}}
**** Revisited in the episode "Family Gay". At a horse race, the announcer rattles off the list of entrants, all of them named for recently cancelled Fox shows.
::* In "Meet the Quagmires" we get this exchange:
*** They also inverted this trope, in the episode "Death Is a Bitch". Assigned by Death with the task of killing the cast of ''[[Dawson's Creek]]'', Peter demurs:
{{quote|'''Molly:''' Hey did you guys hear on the news how President Gore hunted down and killed Osama bin Laden with his bare hands?
{{quote| '''Peter:''' I'm not gonna kill those kids. If they die, I'll have nothing to watch on Wednesdays. ''[Glancing at the camera, and breaking out in a nervous grin]'' Other than the fine programs on Fox.}}
'''Lois:''' Yeah, who woulda thought that bin Laden was hiding out in the cast of [[Mad TV]]?
*** In "Meet the Quagmires" we get this exchange:
{{quote| '''Molly:''' Hey did you guys hear on the news how President Gore hunted down and killed Osama bin Laden with his bare hands?<br />
'''Lois:''' Yeah, who woulda thought that bin Laden was hiding out in the cast of [[Mad TV]]?<br />
'''Quagmire:''' Man, the perfect hiding spot. The one place no one would look! }}
'''Quagmire:''' Man, the perfect hiding spot. The one place no one would look! }}
**** Also an [[Actor Allusion]], as Alex Borstein who voices Lois had a recurring role on [[Mad TV]].
::* Also an [[Actor Allusion]], as Alex Borstein who voices Lois had a recurring role on [[Mad TV]].
*** Then there was the episode where they took one potshot after another at [[Fox News]] when Lois went to work for them.
::* Then there was the episode where they took one potshot after another at [[Fox News]] when Lois went to work for them.
**** In ''Something Something Something Dark Side'' the opening scrawl turns into a ramble about how Fox thought so little of the ''[[Star Wars]]'' franchise that it did not bother to retain merchandising rights, handing those off to Lucas. It then goes on to point out precisely how valuable those merchandising rights turned out to be and questions the sanity of Fox stockholders for sticking with a company that makes such unbelievably stupid choices about money.
::* In ''Something Something Something Dark Side'' the opening scrawl turns into a ramble about how Fox thought so little of the ''[[Star Wars]]'' franchise that it did not bother to retain merchandising rights, handing those off to Lucas. It then goes on to point out precisely how valuable those merchandising rights turned out to be and questions the sanity of Fox stockholders for sticking with a company that makes such unbelievably stupid choices about money.
*** In "Big Man on Hippocampus", there was what appeared to be the trademark black with white lettering panels from [[Adult Swim]] questioning why anyone would watch the show on Fox since it is much funnier on [[Adult Swim]].
::* In "Big Man on Hippocampus", there was what appeared to be the trademark black with white lettering panels from [[Adult Swim]] questioning why anyone would watch the show on Fox since it is much funnier on [[Adult Swim]].
*** Peter closes the episode "Three Kings" with "Now stay tuned for whatever Fox is limping to the barn with".
::* Peter closes the episode "Three Kings" with "Now stay tuned for whatever Fox is limping to the barn with".
*** They've even made fun of TBS in "Hell Comes to Quahog":
::* They've even made fun of TBS in "Hell Comes to Quahog":
{{quote| '''Announcer:''' We now return to [[Fan Service|Showgirls]]...<br />
{{quote|'''Announcer:''' We now return to [[Fan Service|Showgirls]]...
'''Peter:''' Yeah!<br />
'''Peter:''' Yeah!
'''Announcer:''' ...[[Nipple-and-Dimed|on]] [[Edited for Syndication|TBS]].<br />
'''Announcer:''' ...[[Nipple-and-Dimed|on]] [[Edited for Syndication|TBS]].
'''Peter:''' Aww. }}
'''Peter:''' Aww. }}
* ''[[Animaniacs]]'':
* In an ''[[Animaniacs]]'' Wheel of Morality segment, Wakko's response to Yakko's "It's that time again!" is "[Time] to [[Getting Crap Past the Radar|make the Fox censors cry?]]"
** In the Wheel of Morality segment, Wakko's response to Yakko's "It's that time again!" is "[Time] to [[Getting Crap Past the Radar|make the Fox censors cry?]]"
** Their treatment of the network censors in "Valuable Lesson"...
** Their treatment of the network censors in "Valuable Lesson"...
** From the Thanksgiving episode, arguing over a turkey:
** From the Thanksgiving episode, arguing over a turkey:
{{quote| '''Pilgrim:''' Give me the bird!<br />
{{quote|'''Pilgrim:''' Give me the bird!
'''Yakko:''' [[Getting Crap Past the Radar|We'd love to, really]], but the Fox censors won't allow it. }}
'''Yakko:''' [[Getting Crap Past the Radar|We'd love to, really]], but the Fox censors won't allow it. }}
** In the ''[[Pinky and The Brain]]'' [[Spin-Off]], the opening song commented on [[Pinky Elmyra and The Brain|the addition of Elmyra]] with the lines "[[Executive Meddling|It's what the network wants, why bother to complain?]]". At the end of the song, Brain also says "I deeply resent this", and, given the very real hatred of the idea by the show's own writers, it seems likely enough he was referring to more than just his in-story predicaments with Elmyra. This was itself preceded by the episode ''Pinky and the Brain and Larry'', with an intentionally lame and useless extra character inserted just to show how the show didn't need a third wheel... but it was railroaded through anyway.
:* In the ''[[Pinky and The Brain]]'' [[Spin-Off]], the opening song commented on [[Pinky, Elmyra & the Brain|the addition of Elmyra]] with the lines "[[Executive Meddling|It's what the network wants, why bother to complain?]]". At the end of the song, Brain also says "I deeply resent this", and, given the very real hatred of the idea by the show's own writers, it seems likely enough he was referring to more than just his in-story predicaments with Elmyra. This was itself preceded by the episode ''Pinky and the Brain and Larry'', with an intentionally lame and useless extra character inserted just to show how the show didn't need a third wheel... but it was railroaded through anyway.
*** The most notable example would be the episode "You'll Never Eat Food Pellets In This Town Again", which features the titular lab mice as the stars of a hit TV show [[Executive Meddling|being heavily meddled with by network executives, who think heavily altering the show's premise will increase ratings]].
:* The most notable example would be the episode "You'll Never Eat Food Pellets In This Town Again", which features the titular lab mice as the stars of a hit TV show [[Executive Meddling|being heavily meddled with by network executives, who think heavily altering the show's premise will increase ratings]].
** After being forced to switch from FOX to The WB, practically every episode of ''Animaniacs'' used the [[Couch Gag|rotating gag credit]] at the end to bash their new network: "Be The First Kid on Your Block To Actually Watch The WB!"
:* After being forced to switch from FOX to The WB, they proved to not be the type who played favorites. Practically every episode of ''Animaniacs'' used the [[Couch Gag|rotating gag credit]] at the end to bash their new network: "Be The First Kid on Your Block To Actually Watch The WB!"
* [[The Critic]]'' had a few, which make sense, seeing as the protagonist was, well, [[Captain Obvious|a critic:]]
* [[The Critic|Jay Sherman]]: "It's a giant horse's ass! ''(turns to the camera)'' You're watching Fox. Give us 10 minutes; we'll give you an ass."
** {{quote|'''Jay Sherman:''' "It's a giant horse's ass! ''(turns to the camera)'' You're watching Fox. Give us 10 minutes; we'll give you an ass."}}
** Hearing the word 'ass' on TV doesn't sound like much nowadays, but back then it was long before [[South Park]] made swearing okay and a fairly surprising shock to hear.
:* Hearing the word 'ass' on TV doesn't sound like much nowadays, but back then it was long before [[South Park]] made swearing okay and a fairly surprising shock to hear.
** One of his voiceovers during the [[Eyecatch]]: "You're watching Fox. Shame on you!"
:* One of his voiceovers during the [[Eyecatch]]: "You're watching Fox. Shame on you!"
* The intro to the first ''[[Futurama]]'' movie is a long string of jokes where the cancellation of the show is compared to Planet Express' flight license being canceled by the "Box Network", which is in turn an unending string of attacks on Fox for canceling the show in the first place.
* ''[[Futurama]]'', being a [[Spiritual Successor]] to ''[[The Simpsons (animation)|The Simpsons]]'' had many:
** The intro to the first movie is a long string of jokes where the cancellation of the show is compared to Planet Express' flight license being canceled by the "Box Network", which is in turn an unending string of attacks on Fox for canceling the show in the first place.
** The [[Couch Gag]] tagline for that movie is ''[[Self Deprecating Humor|"It just won't stay dead!"]]''
** The [[Couch Gag]] tagline for that movie is ''[[Self Deprecating Humor|"It just won't stay dead!"]]''
** In the first string of Lampshade jokes that opens the movie, the Professor mentions that the executives responsible for their cancellation had been fired, then beaten up, badly mauled and finally ground into a fine powder that was then packaged and sold as 'Torgo's Executive Powder,' a product with a million and one uses.
** In the first string of Lampshade jokes that opens the movie, the Professor mentions that the executives responsible for their cancellation had been fired, then beaten up, badly mauled and finally ground into a fine powder that was then packaged and sold as 'Torgo's Executive Powder,' a product with a million and one uses.
** Fox is repeatedly the target of jabs during the series. Such as this exchange from "When Aliens Attack":
** Fox is repeatedly the target of jabs during the series. Such as this exchange from "When Aliens Attack":
{{quote| '''Fry''': Wow, so this is a real TV station, huh?<br />
{{quote|'''Fry''': Wow, so this is a real TV station, huh?
'''Technician''': Well, it's a Fox affiliate. }}
'''Technician''': Well, it's a Fox affiliate. }}
*** Fry then spills his drink on the control console, knocking the station off the air. The technician panics, but Fry is confident that nobody will notice.
::* Fry then spills his drink on the control console, knocking the station off the air. The technician panics, but Fry is confident that nobody will notice.
{{quote| '''Technician''': Oh my God. You knocked FOX off the air!<br />
{{quote|'''Technician''': Oh my God. You knocked FOX off the air!
'''Fry''': Pfft, like [[Exact Words|anyone on Earth]] cares. }}
'''Fry''': Pfft, like [[Exact Words|anyone on Earth]] cares. }}
** The trope strikes again in the very first Comedy Central episode, which opens with a still of the Hypnotoad while a voiceover by Bender tells the viewer, on the count of three, to [[Canon Dis Continuity|forget]] the show was ever cancelled by [[Fox|idiots]] and revived by... ''bigger'' idiots.
::* The trope strikes again in the very first Comedy Central episode, which opens with a still of the Hypnotoad while a voiceover by Bender tells the viewer, on the count of three, to [[Canon Discontinuity|forget]] the show was ever cancelled by [[FOX|idiots]] and revived by... ''bigger'' idiots.
*** This is something of an inversion of this trope, for instead of mocking their old network, they mock the one they are just picked up by. They don't have a single bad word to say about [[Cartoon Network]], and for good reason.
:::* This is something of an inversion of this trope, for instead of mocking their old network, they mock the one they are just picked up by. They don't have a single bad word to say about [[Cartoon Network]], and for good reason.
** Back when they were on Fox, the crew go on a tour of Hollywood, where the tour guide says the Fox logo spotlights are used to blind pilots so that they can film the resulting plane crashes.
::* Back when they were on Fox, the crew go on a tour of Hollywood, where the tour guide says the Fox logo spotlights are used to blind pilots so that they can film the resulting plane crashes.
* ''[[Tiny Toon Adventures]]'' took aim at network execs in general in its very first episode:
* ''[[Tiny Toon Adventures]]'' took aim at network execs in general in its very first episode:
{{quote| Babs: "It takes a group of highly-paid network executives YEARS to come up with a TV show!"<br />
{{quote|Babs: "It takes a group of highly-paid network executives YEARS to come up with a TV show!"
Buster: "Which means it should take US... about as long as this next commercial break!" }}
Buster: "Which means it should take US... about as long as this next commercial break!" }}
** In a segment featuring instructions on how to make your own cartoon, Buster comments after a long list of writers, animators and other personnel.
:* In a segment featuring instructions on how to make your own cartoon, Buster comments after a long list of writers, animators and other personnel.
{{quote| '''Buster:''' And one guy who does nothing except sign his name on it! ''[Steven Spielberg falls onto the top of the pile.]''}}
{{quote|'''Buster:''' And one guy who does nothing except sign his name on it! ''[Steven Spielberg falls onto the top of the pile.]''}}
* ''[[Invader Zim]]'' had a minor character named 'Nick' who was created as a symbol for [[Nickelodeon]]. Nick had various disturbing science experiments performed on him by the main character.
* ''[[Invader Zim]]'' had a minor character named 'Nick' who was created as a symbol for [[Nickelodeon]]. Nick had various disturbing science experiments performed on him by the main character. Considering that Nick was perpetually happy, it might be a jab at how Nickelodeon disliked the dark stuff ''Zim'' was putting out, instead living in an eternally happy rainbow land.
** Considering that Nick was perpetually happy, it might be a jab at how Nickelodeon disliked the dark stuff ''Zim'' was putting out, instead living in an eternally happy rainbow land.
* Yet another Fox example occurred from J Jonah Jameson on ''[[Spider-Man: The Animated Series]]'': "All the networks are laughing at me. Even FOX!"
* Yet another Fox example occurred from J Jonah Jameson on ''[[Spider-Man: The Animated Series]]'': "All the networks are laughing at me. Even FOX!"
* In the "Cartoon Wars" episodes of ''[[South Park]]'', the creators had a very public disagreement with Comedy Central over their right to visually portray the Islamic prophet Mohammad in their show, after a French satirical magazine was fire-bombed by terrorists for doing just that. The episode is essentially an extended debate between freedom of speech (in regards to comedy and satire) and censorship in the name of political correctness. During the scene where Mohammad was supposed to appear, South Park inserted a neutral title card stating (truthfully) that Comedy Central had ultimately refused to allow Mohammad to be show. The irony was that South Park had featured Mohammad as a character in the episode "Super Best Friends" and had him hidden in the title sequence of the show for the last two seasons.
* In the "Cartoon Wars" episodes of ''[[South Park]]'', the creators had a very public disagreement with Comedy Central over their right to visually portray the Islamic prophet Mohammad in their show, after a French satirical magazine was fire-bombed by terrorists for doing just that. The episode is essentially an extended debate between freedom of speech (in regards to comedy and satire) and censorship in the name of political correctness. During the scene where Mohammad was supposed to appear, South Park inserted a neutral title card stating (truthfully) that Comedy Central had ultimately refused to allow Mohammad to be show. The irony was that South Park had featured Mohammad as a character in the episode "Super Best Friends" and had him hidden in the title sequence of the show for the last two seasons.
* When ever an evil corporation is mentioned in ''[[Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law]]'', a little neon sign turns on the background saying "An AOL/TimeWarner company."
* When ever an evil corporation is mentioned in ''[[Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law]]'', a little neon sign turns on the background saying "An AOL/TimeWarner company."
{{quote| '''Reducto:''' No! [pulls out a complicated schematic] There is no government, just a few multi-national corporations that run everything.<br />
{{quote|'''Reducto:''' No! [pulls out a complicated schematic] There is no government, just a few multi-national corporations that run everything.
[The words "An AOL/Time Warner Co." appear on the bar's sign in the background.] }}
[The words "An AOL/Time Warner Co." appear on the bar's sign in the background.] }}
* ''[[Aqua Teen Hunger Force]]'':
* After the original version of the episode was rejected for not meeting Broadcast Standards and Practices guidelines, the ''[[Aqua Teen Hunger Force]]'' episode "Gee Whiz" was rewritten to be an extended slam of said organization, complete with a filmstrip about network standards that ends by congratulating the viewer for making "a bland show that no one can relate to".
** After the original version of the episode was rejected for not meeting Broadcast Standards and Practices guidelines, the episode "Gee Whiz" was rewritten to be an extended slam of said organization, complete with a filmstrip about network standards that ends by congratulating the viewer for making "a bland show that no one can relate to".
** A filmstrip that makes its point by showing the incorrect and then the correct way ''[[Crosses the Line Twice|to blow a nun's head off]]''.
** A filmstrip that makes its point by showing the incorrect and then the correct way ''[[Crosses the Line Twice|to blow a nun's head off]]''.
** Another example in the one hundredth episode has Shake trying to push the show's merchandise at the Adult Swim Shop, saying they "sell all our stuff for more than you can buy in other places."
** Another example in the one hundredth episode has Shake trying to push the show's merchandise at the Adult Swim Shop, saying they "sell all our stuff for more than you can buy in other places."
Line 358: Line 351:
** The ending of "Don't Touch That Dial" is probably the show's [[Crowning Moment of Awesome]]. After chastizing a toddler for vegetating to "electronic pablum," Mighty Mouse turns to us and says "But enough of all this lying and hypocrisy. Time for what television's ''really'' about." Cut to commercial.
** The ending of "Don't Touch That Dial" is probably the show's [[Crowning Moment of Awesome]]. After chastizing a toddler for vegetating to "electronic pablum," Mighty Mouse turns to us and says "But enough of all this lying and hypocrisy. Time for what television's ''really'' about." Cut to commercial.
* The beginning of "Tortoise Beats Hare" has Bugs Bunny reading the credits out loud. He blows his top after seeing the cartoon title:
* The beginning of "Tortoise Beats Hare" has Bugs Bunny reading the credits out loud. He blows his top after seeing the cartoon title:
{{quote| '''Bugs:''' ''(angrily)'' Why dese guys don't know what they're talkin' about, the big buncha joiks! (''smugly'') I oughta know. I woik for 'em.}}
{{quote|'''Bugs:''' ''(angrily)'' Why dese guys don't know what they're talkin' about, the big buncha joiks! (''smugly'') I oughta know. I woik for 'em.}}
* "Blooper Bunny" has [[Daffy Duck]] kvetching about his role in the Bugs Bunny 51-1/2 anniversary special:
* "Blooper Bunny" has [[Daffy Duck]] kvetching about his role in the Bugs Bunny 51½ anniversary special:
{{quote| '''Daffy:''' Who writes this slop?! (''Groans'') Warner Brothers doesn't have a creative bone in their...}}
{{quote|'''Daffy:''' Who writes this slop?! (''Groans'') Warner Brothers doesn't have a creative bone in their...}}
* After ''[[Re Boot]]'' was dropped by ABC the show retroactively dubbed [[Big Bad|Megabyte]]'s forces "'''A'''rmored '''B'''inome '''C'''arriers. Which leads to the line:
* After ''[[ReBoot]]'' was dropped by ABC the show retroactively dubbed [[Big Bad|Megabyte]]'s forces "'''A'''rmored '''B'''inome '''C'''arriers. Which leads to the line:
{{quote| It's the ABC's, they've turned on us.<br />
{{quote|It's the ABC's, they've turned on us!
Treacherous Dogs. }}
Treacherous Dogs.}}
* ''[[Duckman]]'' frequently made jabs at the USA Network.
* ''[[Duckman]]'' frequently made jabs at the USA Network.
* [[Eek the Cat]] has an episode of Eek visiting his own production studio, to find out that series writers are treated as slaves, being forced to write to the point of getting crazy of it and haven't seen the outside world for a long time and that [[Executive Meddling|executives will do anything to get their way]], including ''riding them over with a steamroller''.
* ''[[Eek! The Cat]]'' has an episode of Eek visiting his own production studio, to find out that series writers are treated as slaves, being forced to write to the point of getting crazy of it and haven't seen the outside world for a long time and that [[Executive Meddling|executives will do anything to get their way]], including ''riding them over with a steamroller''.
* The years when ''[[Daria]]'' was on the N! network... whose other shows oozed the same dumb popularity-obsessed teen attitude that Daria mocked.
* The years when ''[[Daria]]'' was on the N! network... whose other shows oozed the same dumb popularity-obsessed teen attitude that Daria mocked.
* ''[[Rocky and Bullwinkle]]'' has been known to poke fun at their producers on occasion. Example:
* ''[[Rocky and Bullwinkle]]'' has been known to poke fun at their producers on occasion. Example:
{{quote| '''Rocky:''' Bullwinkle, I'm worried.<br />
{{quote|'''Rocky:''' Bullwinkle, I'm worried.
'''Bullwinkle:''' Ratings down in the show again?<br />
'''Bullwinkle:''' Ratings down in the show again?
'''Rocky:''' No.<br />
'''Rocky:''' No.
'''Bullwinkle:''' That's odd.<br />
'''Bullwinkle:''' That's odd.
'''Rocky:''' I'm worried because there have already been two attempts on your life.<br />
'''Rocky:''' I'm worried because there have already been two attempts on your life.
'''Bullwinkle:''' Oh, don't worry. We will be renewed.<br />
'''Bullwinkle:''' Oh, don't worry. We will be renewed.
'''Rocky:''' I'm not talking about the Bullwinkle Show.<br />
'''Rocky:''' I'm not talking about the Bullwinkle Show.
'''Bullwinkle:''' You had better; we could use the publicity. }}
'''Bullwinkle:''' You had better; we could use the publicity. }}
** Another example, as Boris and Natasha look for an A-bomb to blow open a giant trunk:
:* Another example, as Boris and Natasha look for an A-bomb to blow open a giant trunk:
{{quote| '''Rocky:''' They said A-bomb! Do you know what that means, Bullwinkle?<br />
{{quote|'''Rocky:''' They said A-bomb! Do you know what that means, Bullwinkle?
'''Bullwinkle:''' Sure. "A bomb" is what some people call our show!<br />
'''Bullwinkle:''' Sure. "A bomb" is what some people call our show!
'''Rocky:''' (''miffed'') I didn't think that was very funny.<br />
'''Rocky:''' (''miffed'') I didn't think that was very funny.
'''Bullwinkle:''' (''looking to camera'') Neither did ''they,'' apparently. }}
'''Bullwinkle:''' (''looking to camera'') Neither did ''they,'' apparently.}}
* In one scene from ''[[Amphibia (TV series)|Amphibia]]'' (a cartoon produced by [[Disney]]) Polly goes into a store in the mall where kids can construct their own stuffed animals. After perusing the available pieces, she finds a nose-mouth piece that resembles that of Mickey Mouse. "Eh, no thanks," she says and tosses it aside.


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{{quote| [[Self-Demonstrating Article|Oh look, another "witty" self-demonstrating]] [[The Stinger|stinger]] to show that [[TV Tropes]] is dumber--more informal!-- than [[The Other Wiki]]. [[Flat Joy|Joy]].}}
:[[Self-Demonstrating Article|Oh look, another "witty" self-demonstrating]] [[The Stinger|stinger]] to show that [[All The Tropes]] is dumbermore informal! than [[The Other Wiki]]. [[Flat Joy|Joy]].


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[[Category:Comedy Tropes]]
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[[Category:Biting the Hand Humor]]

Latest revision as of 14:38, 17 August 2023

"BBC bastards."

SteveCoupling (a show financed by The BBC)

When on a comedy the characters make jokes at the expense of the studio or network funding their movie or TV show. In the US, the favorite target out of the Big Four Networks seems to be FOX, although all networks are Acceptable Targets at some point or another.

This trope would also fit those moments when an embittered author, or one cynical of the morality of the publishing industry, inserts into his work a thinly disguised slap to the face of the publishing house that is keeping him in work, albeit for not entirely satisfactory royalties or advance payments.

A sister trope to Take That and Writer Revolt. Related to Take That, Audience!. Remembering who wears the pants can combine this with End of Series Awareness.

Examples of Biting the Hand Humor include:

Anime and Manga

  • One arc of Digimon Adventure ends with a climactic battle in the Fuji TV station, which broadcast the show in Japan. It's mercilessly destroyed, although part of the architecture is used to destroy the Big Bad. The English dub just refers to "the TV station," which is a shame—the dub aired on Fox and everything!
  • Speaking of the Fuji TV station, it also occurred in several Kochikame TV specials which the building was destroyed during the climaxes. One time, its architecture was used as a wrecking ball to knock a few stories off a skyscraper.
  • The first episode of the OVA Dangaioh had the AIC building (Dangaioh's production company) destroyed by the invading bad guys.
  • With Tiger and Bunny, Sunrise figured out that the best way to make use of blatant Product Placement was to make fun of blatant Product Placement.

Jackson: You know who made you a hero, right?
Kotetsu: Our sponsors, sir!
Jackson: Good!

  • A dub example. If you play a scene in episode 130 of Pokémon backwards, you will hear James say "Leo Burnett and 4kids are the devil! Leo Burnett!" 4kids is the company that dubbed the series.
  • In-universe example in Kannagi. Akiba brings a taped show for the main character Jin, because Jin accidentally taped over a show that Nagi hadn't watched yet on a VHS tape. He first hands out a Blu-ray, then when Jin mentions not having a Blu-ray player, he pulls out a tape. Nagi asks what it is, and turns out it's a Betamax tape, which Jin also doesn't have a player for. Cue the characters looking at Akiba.

Akiba: Its a Sony!

  • "Daily Lives of High School Boys was lazily brought to you by these sponsors..."
    • "Daily Lives of High School Boys was intermittently brought to you by these sponsors..."
    • "Daily Lives of High School Boys should have been brought to you by these sponsors..."

Comic Books

Film

Ben Affleck: You're like a child. What've I been telling you? You gotta do the safe picture. Then you can do the art picture. But then sometimes you gotta do the payback picture because your friend says you owe him. Beat and Aside Glance

  • Wayne's World actually had this as a plot point, with the boys making fun of their show's sponsor.
  • Woody Allen's Stardust Memories is one long lament against his fans, with Allen playing his own Author Avatar of a filmmaker who made his name with silly slapstick movies and whose fans are currently decrying his efforts at more sophisticated projects. Everyone he meets declares "I love your movies, especially the early funny ones."
  • Idiocracy made a point to savage the hand of every piece of Product Placement appearing in the film. Fudruckers' name slowly mutates into 'Buttfuckers'. Carl Jr's slogan becomes 'Fuck you, I'm eating!'. Opinions divide on the motives behind this move.
    • One would presume Rule of Funny.
    • It's generally assumed that Gatorade refused to allow this, so they created "Brawndo" instead.
  • In a similar way, Fight Club mocks most of its product placement (though one was intentional, as Edward Norton hates the New Beetle and intended to have a scene hitting it).
  • In The Lion King, Zazu starts to sing "It's A Small World". Scar freaks out and demands him to sing anything else but that.
  • In Impromptu, a group of struggling artists put on a theater production for their wealthy patrons that insult said patrons. The artists give "true art is offensive" as their justification.
  • After RoboCop has been reprogrammed in Robocop 2, one of his directives is to "avoid Orion meetings".
  • Pee-wee's Big Adventure does this in the climax: Pee-Wee Herman sneaks into the Warner Bros. studio to find his stolen bike and escapes on it, but ends up being chased by studio security guards.
  • The near destruction of Pixar in |Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol, as seen in the trailer.
  • At the end of Holy Flying Circus, God tells Michael Palin that he's having a dream that will probably be used as the ending for a heavy-handed BBC 4 comedy/drama.

Michael: Gosh, there's a BBC4 in the future? They must be doing well.

Literature

  • In Maskerade, Terry Pratchett manages a dig at the publishing industry and the morality of book publishers by having Nanny Ogg bilked over a publishing deal, in which her payment for a best-seller is the usual gratis author's copy of the book and nothing else. Granny Weatherwax plays catch-up on her friend's behalf and demonstrates that a publisher's worst nightmare is a cheated witch. They leave the offices with an advance payment of five thousand dollars.
  • Sci-fi author Philip José Farmer, in his Riverworld series where all the Earth's population is resurrected into a wholly unexpected afterlife, has the character who is his Marty Stu in the book (legitimate, as we are all characters on the Riverworld) meet a publisher who once cheated him. Near-lethal vengeance is administered. The publisher is given the name Sharko.

Live-Action TV

  • Alfred Hitchcock used to do this to the advertisers sponsoring his shows a lot. For instance, in one episode he came on before the film to give a brief lecture about how pagans used to try to tell the future by looking at the internal organs of various animals. Then, looking at a modern X-ray of an animal, he predicted that we viewers were in for a "very gloomy" next minute or so. Cue the commercial break...
  • Mystery Science Theater 3000 had a throwaway joke in Santa Claus where, in response to kids writing letters to Santa, they quipped that writing to these Comedy Central contests was useless.
    • Also in Godzilla vs Megalon when the radar dish-like Maser cannons are being deployed: "Man, all this and they still can't get the Comedy Channel!".
  • Married... with Children had an episode in which the cast assumed "Fox viewing positions," which involved grabbing onto the rabbit ears, standing on one foot, balancing pots on their heads, etc. For you youngsters who've always had cable, the Fox network originally used mostly UHF stations, which were sometimes hard to tune in depending on weather, etc. This was just one of many, many pokes at Fox's programming reputation.
    • Several episodes had a family member watching TV and hearing/listening to the promo for some utterly awful-sounding show, like "Psycho Dad" or "Psycho Mom". The promo would always conclude with the phrase, "On Fox!", to which the family member would reply, "Naturally."
  • Seinfeld did this trope as well, by having Jerry and George pitch a Show Within a Show to NBC. The pitch—a show about nothing—was the real life pitch for the real life Seinfeld. According to Larry David, the meeting really played a lot like the episode.
  • True Blood does this with one of their sponsors: Nintendo. There have been at least two episodes where characters were shown playing the Nintendo Wii and having a good, wholesome time. Finally, near the very end of season two they had a clearly deranged stay-at-home mom flailing the Wii remote around as she killed in psychopathic glee...suddenly those previous scenes don't seem so wholesome.
    • Then season three started: No Wii.
  • On July 21, 1969, Johnny Carson announced that he was due for a raise because his contract with NBC said that he'd get a raise when men walked on the moon.
  • This is one of David Letterman's favorite types of gag.
    • Letterman used to poke fun at Westinghouse when it owned CBS, through on-stage use of its industrial products.
    • Before CSI made a killing for CBS, Letterman's Top 10 lists made the occasional joke or two about how little watched CBS was at the time. An example: "CBS: More powerful than The Weather Channel."
    • CBS' Late Show site actually archives every single CBS list, so you can check for yourself.
    • Before he changed networks, Letterman did plenty of digs at NBC and their parent company, General Electric.
    • Jay Leno of The Tonight Show must have similar writers - he makes a lot of jokes at NBC's expense, too. He even makes jokes about how bad his jokes are.
  • CBS cares.
  • Thirty Rock also can't seem to stop making fun of NBC and General Electric.
  • A number of British Series knock their own channel.
  • Many comedy shows on the ABC (the Australian one) make fun of the network's usually low budget. The Chaser's War on Everything also mocked the ABC's left-wing stance, and after Maxine McKew, an ABC News reporter, began running as a candidate for the Labor party, it had one sketch where Australia's parliament gave out Labor seats to ABC personalities.
  • I've yet to see any comedy show on the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation that does not make fun of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation at some point, if not continuously.
  • Because it's his job to make fun of everything on television, Charlie Brooker makes fun of the Beeb on his BBC Four show Screenwipe just as much as anyone else. While he does make light jabs at BBC Four's pretentiousness with fake shows like Harpsichord Challenge and The History of Corners, and BBC Three's pandering to the base with Sick on a Widow, he also gives well deserved criticism at recent BBC recommendations relating to the Credits Pushback.
    • At least one jab was aimed at the viewers, in a piece about computer games:

"Yes, videogames are going through a renaissance, and you should not miss out - like you are now, by choosing to watch TV instead, like some kind of medieval throwback farmhand fuck."

  • Also, he often lays into Endemol produced shows such as Big Brother, while Brooker's production company is itself a subsidiary of Endemol. At one point this is Lampshaded, by immediately following a particularly vitriolic attack on Endemol with the Zeppotron/Endemol Vanity Plate from the end of the show.
  • Brooker's Dead Set, in which Big Brother contestants face a Zombie Apocalypse, was also made by Zeppotron and was broadcast on E4.
  • Although not a comedy, The Bill had a moment where two character were checking a hotel's CCTV cameras during an undercover operation. They were making comments related to the order of channels on the TV set. BBC 2 was gardening, ITV (the show's own channel, before it became ITV 1) was adverts and the final conclusion to the joke was that Channel 4 (not named) was sex, as they discovered Dave and Polly kissing in a hotel room. Taking the joke further, Channel Five equals porn (although, not as much... these days.)
  • In one skit on Whose Line Is It Anyway, Colin Mochrie screamed at Ryan Stiles and Wayne Brady: "You're not human! You're less than human! You're network executives!" However, after the game, Drew Carey went to great lengths to point out that Colin wasn't talking about ABC (the American one).
    • In one episode, they attempt to do an improv of a theme song for a sitcom featuring Bill Cosby and Adolf Hitler. When the executives (mid-skit nonetheless) bring down the hammer and bans them from using Hitler in the skit. For the entire rest of the episode, almost every single bit of improv became a Take That towards the executives, calling them prudes, taking every single opportunity to bring up the Fuhrer, etc.
    • There was one episode where Ryan had to play a weatherman who discovered the portal to hell was behind his green screen. He goes through the portal and looks at Drew and says: "So THAT'S how you got two shows!"
      • Everyone (but especially Ryan) rags on Drew.
  • In an episode of Millennium, a demon causes a member of an unspecified network's Broadcast Standards and Practices department to go crazy, culminating in a shooting rampage that results in the deaths of two actors dressed as aliens. The demon then remarks that, as a result of this one action, he damned millions of people, as not every network has such strict Broadcast Standards and Practices. Cut to grainy video of the shooting, now repackaged as the latest FOX network special: "When Humans Attack!"
  • In The X-Files episode "Nisei", Scully dismisses an Alien Autopsy Video as "even hokier than the one they aired on the Fox network".
  • Saturday Night Live has had plenty of jokes/skits about NBC over the years, but went wild with them in Seasons 4 and 5 (covering 1978-1980) when super-executive Fred Silverman, who had worked ratings wonders for CBS and ABC, failed to repeat that magic when he was head honcho of NBC over 1978-1981. Examples:
    • The Kate Jackson episode has a running gag revealing that Silverman (played by John Belushi) was sent to NBC by Charlie to ruin the network.
    • The 1979 Christmas show has a running gag of promos hyping Gary Coleman appearances on every other NBC show and special, since Diff'rent Strokes was one of the network's only hits at the time, along with SNL.
    • The "Limo for the Lame-O" affair: Al Franken encouraged viewers to send letters to NBC asking that Franken get the use of a company limo—since Silverman had one despite all the flops he'd launched, and Franken was on a hit show. This did not go over well with Silverman, and it led to him nixing Lorne Michaels' request that Franken succeed him as executive producer of SNL.
    • Then there was the "Conspiracy Theory Rock" short from the 1998 season, which is about major corporations like General Electric controlling the media. It was banned from re-airing, but would appear on a TV Funhouse "Best Of" DVD.
    • In an installment of Weekend Update:

Seth Meyers: You have TV in Hell?
The Devil: Well, just NBC.

  • Towards the end of his run on The Tonight Show, Conan got absolutely vicious with these. For example, he mentioned that his rating were up 50%(due to the controversy), and continued that he was on the wrong network. He also introduced new one-shot characters for no reason other than to be really expensive, such as the mouse made out of a Bugatti Veyron, with the backing track of the original studio recording version of the Rolling Stones' "Satisfaction". As he pointed out, both the broadcast rights and the syndication rights to the song were "crazy expensive", bringing the price tag of the character, who appeared for all of two minutes, to 1.5 million dollars. "What're they gonna do, fire me?"
    • And then, when word got out that the network was banning him from saying bad things about them, he got around it by SINGING insults.
      • And then, when that didn't work, he said them in Spanish (complete with subtitles):

"NBC is like a Goat that Eats Money and Shits Trouble."

  • The Bugatti Veyron was on loan. Conan admitted the "crazy expensive" skits were jokes after fake ground sloth skeleton spraying fake beluga caviar on a fake authentic Picasso painting. It's also unclear how much NBC tried to prevent Conan's incredibly popular ravaging of the network and how much Conan just made up for laughs. Nearly all of his final two weeks at NBC were this trope, however.
  • Not only that, Conan would often bash NBC and promote other networks, simply while conversing with guests and not making a bit out of it. It's likely Conan was saying these things simply because he really felt that way (hosting the Tonight Show was a life-long dream of his) and mostly got laughs because they were very cathartic.
  • The Daily Show and The Colbert Report do this frequently. One toss between the two shows had a jealous Colbert mocking fellow Daily Show alumnus Ed Helms for not having a nightly show. When reminded that his own show was on Comedy Central, Colbert broke down sobbing: "I know! God, it's horrible! I wish I was on the Food Network!"
    • An episode of the former once showed a clip of Barack Obama being asked if he had ever seen the Comedy Central show 'Lil' Bush, to which he replied "I heard of it, but I've never seen it." Cut to Stewart saying "Join the club."
    • Stewart also had a little fun at the network's expense during his feud with Jim Cramer. Cramer made appearances on every NBC network/show he could (his home channel of CNBC, NBC's Today, MSNBC, etc). Stewart responded by going on a "Viacom tour". Cut to Jon appearing on Dora the Explorer (Nick Jr) and The Hills (MTV), unleashing the awesome power of his employer's multimedia empire.
    • An example of another network getting its hand bit on The Daily Show: In 1997 Keith Olbermann, a Sports Center anchor at the time, appeared as a guest on the The Daily Show with Craig Kilborn (himself a Sports Center anchor before becoming host of The Daily Show) without permission from his bosses at ESPN, as required by that network's rules. During the interview Olbermann was asked (as part of the now-retired Five Questions segment) "What's the most god-forsaken place on the East Coast?" and answered "Bristol, Connecticut." Bristol happens to be the headquarters of ESPN. He got a two-week suspension, and the incident partially led to his departure from ESPN that year.
    • Colbert also mocks this trope a lot, when he was feeling uneasy about giving Jon advertising.

"No free rides, guy who made my career."

  • When The Colbert Report debuted it was followed by a short-lived talk show called Too Late With Adam Carolla. One night Stephen closed his show by saying, "Stay tuned for Adam Carolla. His guest tonight? Comedy."
  • Strangers with Candy bit the hand hard in their final episode. Two property developers show up at Flatpoint High and repeatedly deny that they're tearing it down and building a strip mall, even as classrooms are demolished and food outlets built in their place. At the end of the episode, the teachers and students go on a rampage of destruction and burn down the school, with one teacher gloating "They'll never turn it into a strip mall now!" The Reality Subtext: the property developers were based on two Comedy Central network execs. Strangers with Candy was being cancelled, and replaced with a show called Strip Mall.
  • During the 2006 Emmy Awards on NBC, host Conan O'Brien, whose show is also on NBC, puts it delicately:

Yeah, we got trouble, right here at NBC
With a capital "T" and that rhymes with "G" as in "Gee, we're screwed!"
Yeah, we got trouble, right here at NBC
I hate to disrespect, but my lawyer checked and I can't be sued!

  • There was also a hilarious crack about how since the ceremony was on NBC, it would probably be canceled halfway through.
  • In early 2010, Conan is once again taking shots at NBC, although this is less "Biting the hand that feeds" and more "Mauling the arm that hit you."
  • This all came full circle with Jimmy Fallon hosting the 2010 Emmys

So NBC asked the host of Late Night to come to LA and host a different show. What could possibly go wrong?

  • Harry Hills TV Burp makes fun of all channels about equally and does not spare its parent ITV. For example:

Harry: If you enjoyed the BBC's Who Do You Think You Are? you may be interested in ITV's You Don't Know You're Born...which is the same.

  • Harry's earlier Channel Four series frequently made fun of that channel, depicting numerous run-ins with the Controller of Channel Four, who was portrayed as a child.
  • Not just a child, but a ventriloquist's dummy that had the personality of a child.
  • X-Play would occasionally jab at G4 after its Network Decay, with specific references to being on the same channel as The Man Show.
  • In one episode of Dirty Jobs, there was an incident in a salt mine where one of the camera men narrowly avoided getting hit on the head by a large rock. One of the mine workers joked that when someone is injured to 'go for the wallet first.' Cue Mike Rowe's reply "He's a camera man. For the Discovery Channel. There's nothing in his wallet."
    • Also, this fun exchange:

Dairy Farmer: Yeah, you just want to bend over right there.
Mike: Just bend over and get ready for it?
Dairy Famer: Yup. That's not a problem?
Mike: Sir, I've been in television so long, I'm a pro at bending over and taking it.

  • Something similar happened on Destination Truth. Josh Gates is browsing through a marketplace in Turkey (I believe) and sees a beautiful rug. The shop owner tells him the price and Josh looks surprised. They then cut to him looking at much smaller rugs, roughly the size of a sheet of paper (the shop owner suggests using them under a telephone,) and Josh says "I work on cable, my friend, this is all I can afford." He never explicitly mentions Syfy, but the implication is there.
  • While presenting the Best Animated Feature nominees at the 2009 Academy Awards, Jack Black explains to co-presenter Jennifer Aniston his secret to success when it comes to making money at voice acting:

Jack Black: Each year I do one Dreamworks Animation project, then I take all the money to the Oscars and bet it on Pixar.

  • What was especially funny about the moment, though, is that one of the people who laughed hardest when he made this joke was...Jeffrey Katzenberg.
  • While we're on the topic of the Oscars, after the 2008 show played a montage of movies addressing the social issues of their time (in a very "look how awesome we are for doing this" tone):
  • John Oliver's segment on the 78th academy awards where he says they managed to move past the dark clouds of failure from the previous year (the one Jon Stewart hosted).
  • In the Spike Milligan series Q6 (1975), the first episode features several digs at the BBC's security guards, the "crummy wardrobe department" and the high prices in the canteen.
  • The Goodies contains numerous swipes at the BBC, most notably in the episodes "Alternative Roots" and "The End", during which a service announcement warns of "cutbacks of a hundred percent" - and the screen immediately goes black!
    • And in the Gender Education episode they blew up the BBC Television centre! The rest of that one they spent taking the mickey out of Mary Whitehouse
  • Every episode of This American Life (both on radio and TV) ends with Ira Glass attributing some quote from the show, taken out of context, to the general manager of WBEZ, the show's home radio station.
  • On one episode of Kingdom: Is there an ITV4?
  • In his show No Reservations, celebrity chef Anthony Bourdain frequently pokes fun at his producers and The Travel Network.
    • Although compared to the absolute demolishing of Food Network in his book, A Cook's Tour (which was funded by the network in question), Bourdain is pratically complimentary.
  • The Soup takes sooooooooo many jabs at E! They even have a segment dedicated to mocking E! shows called "Let's take some E!"
    • Also a staple of Chelsea Lately. Chelsea Handler frequently ridiculed the network president, even while she was dating him.
  • An episode of Family Matters had Carl passive-aggressively chewed out by his wife for liking The Three Stooges, and essentially calls him childish and sadistic for liking a show about people getting hurt. His nephew Richie even says that the show was too juvenile for him. Saying this while The Three Stooges is essentially the grandfather of sitcoms (including Family Matters) and is practically responsible for physical comedy as a whole. Even hypocritical considering how much physical comedy Family Matters itself used.
  • In Talkin Bout Your Generation, host Shaun Micallef makes unkind remarks about the Ten network a few times; once, he lampshaded this by miming biting his hand afterwards.
  • When he was a panelist on Match Game, Richard Dawson used to quip that his Family Feud was the most popular show in Guam.
  • The Too Good to Last game show Clash (Ha!/Comedy Central) had Billy Kimball addressing a discrepency "because if we don't, we're going to get a letter from our viewer."
  • A 1971 episode of The Sonny & Cher Comedy Hour featured an opera version of All in The Family with a completely different cast playing the Bunkers and Stivics, with the plotline having the CBS censor being invited for dinner. The CBS censor was played by Carroll O'Connor.
  • Satirical BBC panel game Have I Got News for You does this a lot. One of the most notable occasions was in the late 1990s when the BBC director-general John Birt banned BBC programs from discussing rumours that politician Peter Mandelson (a close friend of Birt) was gay; this act by Birt was widely regarded as an abuse of Birt's position and clear bias towards a friend who was otherwise an obvious target for satirists. Viewers eagerly awaited the first show after this became public, to see if the show would break the BBC's rules. Early on, guest Jackie Mason made a reference about Mandelson, and soon everyone else was at it, so the entire show became an attack on Mandelson's hypocrisy and Birt's attempt to get the BBC to cover for his friend.
  • Eric Idle's post-Monty Python sketch show Rutland Weekend Television was un-necessarily crippled by a miniscule budget granted by a parsimonious BBC. Idle, Innes, Woolf and Batley ended the first series on a bitter spoof song about the mean and miserly attitude of the BBC, where the male characters sat naked on a row of stools in a bare studio, with only minmal modesty-saving towels (Gwen Taylor was absent for this one).

Hello, I bet you're wondering why we're here/Sitting on our bums, without a stitch of gear/For as it happens, the budget has expired/And everything's gone back to the place from whence it's hired...

  • An episode of The Mighty Boosh (made by the BBC) has Howard watching a bland, seven-hour documentary about an obscure film director and his incomprehensible works... on BBC Four. They got to use the real BBC Four logo.
  • Boy Meets World delivered a really big Take That at ABC for moving the show's timeslot. It happens in the episode where Cory and Topanga are babysitting a kid and are discussing his bedtime:

Kid: At least let me watch my favorite show. It's on right now!
Topanga: But it's 9:30, I know you don't stay up past nine.
Kid: It used to be on at 8:30 but this year they moved it to 9:30, those idiots.
Cory: Wait a minute, they moved that show to 9:30? Why?
Kid: No one knows!
Cory: Well was it doing badly at 8:30?
Kid: No!
Cory: Well why didn't they leave it alone?
Kid: There're trying to kill it! There're trying to kill it!
Cory: Those are bad, bad people.

  • ABC took notice and changed the timeslot back not long after this.

Director of show in show: They better make great TV, okay? Because I sold this to NBC. NBC! They make classics like Friends and...uh...um...uh...

  • The made-for-tv movie Special Bulletin, which aired on NBC, featured a terrorist remarking "NBC would kill its mother for this footage!"
  • Babylon 5: At the start of season 2, Executive Meddling made the creators sex up Ivanova's appearance. She started wearing redder lipstick and had her hair loose instead of pulled back. When Garibaldi came out of his coma and returned to duty, he commented on her 'new look'. Ivanova snapped back "With everything that's been going on around here I'd think you'd have other things on your mind besides my look!" Take That, Executive Meddlers!
  • An unusual case: ABC has been owned by The Walt Disney Company since 1995, and in the Tom Bergeron era of America's Funniest Home Videos (which started at the Turn of the Millennium), the grand prizes each season are usually related to the Disney Theme Parks or the company's other vacation ventures. The show usually sends Bergeron to the venues in question to spend chunks of his host segments shilling them. Aside from those special episodes, however, Disney hasn't stopped the show from airing home videos that cast the parks in a less-than-ideal light (costumed characters falling off of parade floats or scaring toddlers, kids and adults being unpleasantly surprised by Epcot's famous "leapfrog fountains", etc.), and in one 2005 finale Bergeron joked that when his daughters are at Disney World, the three things they're most eager to see are "Mickey, Minnie, and Daddy's Wallet."

Music

  • The Dead Kennedys turned this into a Crowning Moment of Awesome with their legendary performance of "Pull My Strings" at the Bay Area Music Awards in 1980.
  • The back cover of The Replacements' Let It Be is a picture of graffiti the band members had written on a door, including "Twin/Tone eats slotty crap" (or possibly "...sloth crap"). The Replacements were signed to the label Twin/Tone at the time, and what makes it even funnier is that the Twin/Tone logo is positioned directly beneath that message.
    • The rarity "Lookin' For Ya" (which they would re-work into "Love Lines") ends with Paul Westerberg ad-libbing "Keep your riches, give me a Budweiser!". This is because it was originally recorded for Trackin' Up The North, a compilation put together as part of a "Rags To Riches" battle of the bands co-sponsored by Miller High Life.
  • Mr. Bungle were apparently doubtful as to whether or not their major label debut would even be released: In one line of "Carousel" they ask "Will Warner Brothers put this record on the shelf?" (although, possibly as a way of Getting Crap Past the Radar, the liner notes make the blatantly false claim that the lyric is "look at me I'm Sandra Dee)".
    • Devo was also known to mock Warner Brothers, and the music industry in general. Their promotional videos included characters that embodied every record executive stereotype: Rod Rooter, a pimply manager who didn't get Devo ("I can forgive you guys for being artists, but I can't forgive you for being stupid!" "Look at the airplay charts! No, no Devo!") and Daddy-Know-It-All, the boss of Big Entertainment who orders Rod to keep Devo in line.

Newspaper Comics

  • A variation occurred in Pearls Before Swine: Stephan Pastis has often credited Dilbert creator Scott Adams with getting him into the syndicated cartooning world. That didn't stop him from making a storyline where Adams is portrayed as an Elvis caricature that ends up dying of a drug overdose in a toilet off-panel.
    • Pastis has mocked his syndicate several times as well.
  • Gary Trudeau, creator of Doonesbury, has slapped at his employer several times for making him submit strips six weeks in advance, with characters saying things along the lines of "even though the election happened last week, we don't know who won because this strip was submitted six weeks ago."

Radio

  • The "Radio 3" episode of Absolute Power (on Radio 4) was full of digs at The BBC including "In the BBC ratings are like sex; of course they're not important, just as long as you're getting some!"
    • Absolute Power's parent show, In The Red and sequels were made of this trope; BBC radio comedy dramas about an inept BBC radio journalist and his unpleasant BBC bosses.
  • In Season One of Old Harrys Game, Thomas persuades Gary to lead a rebellion of the demons. Two demons keep insisting they need mission statements and brightly-coloured charts.

Thomas: Who are those two?
Gary: They're the demons in charge of torturing former BBC executives.
Thomas: I think they've gone native.

  • I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue often made fun of the BBC. In particular Tim and Graeme spent the early 2000s taking potshots at the Controller of BBC 2, Jane "The Goodies will be repeated over my dead body" Root. After all, she started it.
  • The News Quiz and The Now Show, because sometimes The BBC is the news.
  • The Goon Show started off a lot of their shows with digs at the BBC.
  • Car Talk has an inversion via Self-Deprecation: the Stinger for the show is inevitably something to the effect of "And even though [something indicating deep disapproval/disappointment happens] every time we say it, this is NPR, National Public Radio." In other words, they compliment their network by calling themselves unworthy of it.
  • Radio 4's statistics programme More Or Less, reporting that one of their regular mathematician guests was appearing on BBC One's Winter Wipeout:

Tim Hartford: I hadn't previously seen the show myself, but I now realise it's a bit like Its A Knockout, but without the high philosophical concepts. After watching it, I had one question for David: Why?

Print Media

  • MAD is well-known for its satires of movies, television, and other forms of media, and it very often lampoons works produced by Warner Communications, its parent company.

Video Games

Web Comics

  • Most of the jokes in The Order of the Stick, especially in the first 200 or so comics, are at the expense of Dungeons & Dragons or its publisher, Wizards of the Coast. Rich Burlew, the author, is a freelance game designer who mostly works for Wizards on D&D-related projects. An early strip based on Wizards' slightly bizarre copyright policy is actually titled Biting the Hand That Feeds Me.
    • The OotS strip in the last three issues of Dragon magazine had the Order discover the dragon from the cover of issue 1, whose subsequent career mirrored that of the magazine itself. The second of these strips was titled "Claw/Claw/Bite The Hand That Feeds Me".

Web Original

  • The Bugle podcast is put out by the London Times, which is owned by Murdoch's News Corporation. They've had a couple of digs at Murdoch media products, including "The Sun is, of course, a cousin of the Bugle - not that we all get on with all our relatives".
  • This episode of David Mitchell's Soap Box. (Originally the video went out as a podcast sponsored by Bulldog Natural Grooming.)
    • Later episodes have a Running Gag that David can't remember the name of the company that is sponsoring his podcasts. Eventually Bulldog got in on the joke by announcing "Robert Webb's Soapbox".
  • Psycomedia hosts Tim and Ben both attended Oxford University but many episodes focus on the bizarre research of their teachers and other faculty members. Lovingly. And not libellously.
  • According to Todd in the Shadows, Lady Gaga's "Telephone" has more advertisements than That Guy With The Glasses.com. And "I've realised something about my new workplace. YOU ARE ALL A BUNCH OF NERDS! NERDS! NERDS!"
    • Continues in Linkara's review of KISS comics. When asking Todd if he'd like to co-review after giving the history of KISS, he just laughs at the thought of him reviewing a comic. "I forget how nerdy this site is." Linkara didn't look pleased.
    • In "The Sexual Awakening Of The Human Nerd" by The Nostalgia Chick's supporting cast, Dr. Tease interviews the other reviewers, describing them as "These creatures - I mean, humans - I mean, nerds".
  • Yahtzee has an infrequent habit of calling the Escapist out on having him play and review games he'd rather not. Its not exactly suprising, considering he he insults basically everyone else.

Western Animation

  • The Simpsons has a long history of poking fun at the FOX network.
    • There is a list here of many of the jabs at Fox. Specific Simpsons examples:
      • The Simpsons reached a disturbing new nadir in its "MoneyBART" episode, its Couch Gag (storyboarded by subversive street artist Banksy) depicting the production of Simpsons episodes and merchandise taking place in a toxic sweat shop within a bulding shaped like the 20th Century Fox Vanity Plate. This BBC report claims the sequence "led to delays, disputes over broadcast standards and a threatened walk out by the animation department."
      • Planning to videotape an apparent alien visitor (and taking a swipe at Fox's "Alien Autopsy: Fact or Fiction" broadcast), giving us the second page quote.
      • A Couch Gag had the Fox logo bug appearing in the corner of the screen only for Homer to rip it off and the whole family stamp on it.
      • Another episode had Homer calling an automated stock price hotline, which worked by having the person calling saying the name of the company and the computer replying with the stock's respective value. When Homer asks "What is this crap?", the service replies "Fox Broadcasting: down 8 [points].", followed by him smiling.
      • Yet another episode had Homer investing in "something called News Corp", followed by Lisa telling him that was Fox and Homer screaming "AHH! UNDO! UNDO!"
      • One of the earliest and more subtle ones may be in the Season 4 episode Mr. Plow. When a TV commercial starring the family airs on late at night on an obscure cable channel, Homer exclaims - "It may be on a crappy network, but The Simpsons are on TV".
      • In "Bart Gets An Elephant", Lisa ask someone if they're an ivory dealer, with the reply "Well, little girl, I've had lots of jobs in my day: whale-hunter, seal-clubber, president of the Fox network..."
      • An even better example was in The Movie: During one of the scenes, a Commercial Pop-Up crawler advertising the Fox networks starts moving across the bottom of the screen, ending with "Yes, we even advertise during movies now".
      • Also there was Krusty bemoaning his good-for-nothing half-brother Luke Perry:

Lisa: But he's a big star!
Krusty:Yeah...[with disgust] on Fox.

  • "Missionary: Impossible" begins with Betty White hosting a PBS pledge drive. At the end of the episode, she pops up again, this time hosting a pledge drive for Fox. She urges viewers not to let "crude, lowbrow programming disappear from the airwaves". A Family Guy logo appears on the TV set she's standing next to.

Betty White: Sure, Fox makes a fortune from advertising but it's still not enough.
Rupert Murdoch: Not nearly enough!

  • That particular example is more of a swipe at Family Guy than at Fox. The rivalry between those two shows is not particularly friendly.
  • In that same episode at the end, someone calls in pledging $10,000, and Rupert Murdoch says "You've saved my network!" Bart, hanging up the phone, says "Wouldn't be the first time."
  • This also ended up biting them back; in one episode they mock Butterfinger, a long-time sponsor of the show. Nestle responded by canceling their contract. Acknowledged in the next episode, where the blackboard gag read "I will not bite the hand that feeds me Butterfingers."
  • In a flash-forward episode, set in 2010 15 years from now, we find out that all the programs on Fox have become porn. This happened so gradually that Marge hadn't noticed until that point in time.
  • The Road Rage episode ("Marge Simpson in: Screaming Yellow Honkers"). The family promotes NBC for its quality programming, ending with "How do we know if there's something good on now? Just change the channel", followed by Homer reading out a forced statement over the episode's credits that NBC sucks and Fox rules, under gunpoint, ending with him saying, "CBS: great," and being shot.
  • "Sunday, Cruddy Sunday" has Homer and company tangling with Rupert Murdoch, who refers to himself as "the billionaire tyrant". (Murdoch was actually playing himself.)
  • Another example is when a promo for Joe Millionaire goes across the top of the screen. Homer then eats part of it, but disgustedly spits out the Fox logo.
  • In another episode, the Flanders' kids have been infected with the "Osaka Flu" going around town. Ned then asks himself why God has "forsaken" them only to have a flashback to the one time they watched Married... with Children (complete with sinister lightning).

Ned: Oh Maude, the network slogan was true! "Watch Fox and be damned for all eternity!"

  • In "Lisa vs. Malibu Stacy", the family criticizes Lisa's recent activism:

Homer: And we can't watch Fox because they own those chemical weapon plants in Syria.

  • In "The Simpsons 138th Episode Spectacular" you may remember Troy McClure from such Fox network specials as Alien Nose Job and Five Fabulous Weeks of "The Chevy Chase Show".
  • And in "Treehouse of Horror IX" Ed McMahon would like to remind you that the FOX special World's Deadliest Executions is brought to you by the producers of When Skirts Fall Off and Secrets of National Security Revealed.
  • In The Simpsons Spin-Off Showcase, Troy McClure says that FOX approached the Writers of The Simpsons to create "35 new shows" to fill a "few holes" in the schedule. Cue a poster of the FOX schedule: A slot each for The Simpsons, The X-Files, and Melrose Place, All other slots are question marks.
  • In "Simple Simpson", the family watches Promiscuous Idiots Island on Fox, the home of promiscuous idiots.
  • Plus, there was a scene in a Sideshow Bob episode where Rupert Murdoch himself (speaking with a bad Australian accent) was in jail with Bob. They actually had to ask for and GOT permission from Murdoch himself for that one. His response was apparently "I would be honored to be in jail in The Simpsons".
  • In the episode where Lisa was petitioning to have Springfield turn off all its lights so she could see an upcoming meteor shower, she complained that the only thing she could see in her telescope was the Fox satellite. The screen then cuts to a broken, falling apart satellite that's only being held up by regular party balloons.
  • And in the episode written by and guest starring Ricky Gervais, Fox is described as the home of the world's worst sitcoms, before Lisa points out that the show Mother Flippers (i.e. Trading Spouses) is a rip-off of an existing show. She is bribed with a Fox sweatshirt, but when she points out it's actually an ABC sweatshirt they throw her in the American Idol holding pen.
  • Behind the Laughter: The only reason that "The Simpsons" got picked up as a show, was because Marge's hairdresser was also president of the Fox network.
  • In the couch gag for "Elementary School Musical", the 22nd season premiere, a Fox executive appeared giving the Simpsons a cupcake with a candle on it to celebrate the beginning of the season. After Maggie blew out the candle, the executive took the cupcake and ate it himself.
  • Subverted in another episode, when a media circus hits town, the Fox news van is very large and rolls into view while "We Are The Champions" plays.
  • The show did a parody of The Island of Dr. Moreau called "The Island of Dr. Hibbert." In it, Dr. Hibbert has been turning the people of Springfield into half-men/half-beasts. He himself comes out wearing a fox stole which resembles Mr. Burns, prompting Bart to say, "Ooooh, he got the Fox treatment."
  • In-universe example in one episode. Krusty bad-mouths a particular drug company (I think Percodan) while being taped, then mentions "a word from our sponsor", who also happens to be the same drug company he just criticized. Cue Oh Crap moment for him.
  • In "Sideshow Bob Roberts" Larry King is moderating in a mayoral debate. Before the debate, he addresses the audience.

King:I'm your moderator, Larry King. Now, a word to our audience: even though we're being broadcast on...Fox, there's no need for obnoxious hooting and hollering.
*Cue obnoxious hooting and hollering*

  • An inversion of this Trope, in the episode "Death Is a Bitch". Assigned by Death with the task of killing the cast of Dawson's Creek, Peter demurs:

Peter: I'm not gonna kill those kids. If they die, I'll have nothing to watch on Wednesdays. [Glancing at the camera, and breaking out in a nervous grin] Other than the fine programs on Fox.

  • In "Meet the Quagmires" we get this exchange:

Molly: Hey did you guys hear on the news how President Gore hunted down and killed Osama bin Laden with his bare hands?
Lois: Yeah, who woulda thought that bin Laden was hiding out in the cast of Mad TV?
Quagmire: Man, the perfect hiding spot. The one place no one would look!

  • Also an Actor Allusion, as Alex Borstein who voices Lois had a recurring role on Mad TV.
  • Then there was the episode where they took one potshot after another at Fox News when Lois went to work for them.
  • In Something Something Something Dark Side the opening scrawl turns into a ramble about how Fox thought so little of the Star Wars franchise that it did not bother to retain merchandising rights, handing those off to Lucas. It then goes on to point out precisely how valuable those merchandising rights turned out to be and questions the sanity of Fox stockholders for sticking with a company that makes such unbelievably stupid choices about money.
  • In "Big Man on Hippocampus", there was what appeared to be the trademark black with white lettering panels from Adult Swim questioning why anyone would watch the show on Fox since it is much funnier on Adult Swim.
  • Peter closes the episode "Three Kings" with "Now stay tuned for whatever Fox is limping to the barn with".
  • They've even made fun of TBS in "Hell Comes to Quahog":

Announcer: We now return to Showgirls...
Peter: Yeah!
Announcer: ...on TBS.
Peter: Aww.

  • Animaniacs:
    • In the Wheel of Morality segment, Wakko's response to Yakko's "It's that time again!" is "[Time] to make the Fox censors cry?"
    • Their treatment of the network censors in "Valuable Lesson"...
    • From the Thanksgiving episode, arguing over a turkey:

Pilgrim: Give me the bird!
Yakko: We'd love to, really, but the Fox censors won't allow it.

Jay Sherman: "It's a giant horse's ass! (turns to the camera) You're watching Fox. Give us 10 minutes; we'll give you an ass."

  • Hearing the word 'ass' on TV doesn't sound like much nowadays, but back then it was long before South Park made swearing okay and a fairly surprising shock to hear.
  • One of his voiceovers during the Eyecatch: "You're watching Fox. Shame on you!"
  • Futurama, being a Spiritual Successor to The Simpsons had many:
    • The intro to the first movie is a long string of jokes where the cancellation of the show is compared to Planet Express' flight license being canceled by the "Box Network", which is in turn an unending string of attacks on Fox for canceling the show in the first place.
    • The Couch Gag tagline for that movie is "It just won't stay dead!"
    • In the first string of Lampshade jokes that opens the movie, the Professor mentions that the executives responsible for their cancellation had been fired, then beaten up, badly mauled and finally ground into a fine powder that was then packaged and sold as 'Torgo's Executive Powder,' a product with a million and one uses.
    • Fox is repeatedly the target of jabs during the series. Such as this exchange from "When Aliens Attack":

Fry: Wow, so this is a real TV station, huh?
Technician: Well, it's a Fox affiliate.

  • Fry then spills his drink on the control console, knocking the station off the air. The technician panics, but Fry is confident that nobody will notice.

Technician: Oh my God. You knocked FOX off the air!
Fry: Pfft, like anyone on Earth cares.

  • The trope strikes again in the very first Comedy Central episode, which opens with a still of the Hypnotoad while a voiceover by Bender tells the viewer, on the count of three, to forget the show was ever cancelled by idiots and revived by... bigger idiots.
  • This is something of an inversion of this trope, for instead of mocking their old network, they mock the one they are just picked up by. They don't have a single bad word to say about Cartoon Network, and for good reason.
  • Back when they were on Fox, the crew go on a tour of Hollywood, where the tour guide says the Fox logo spotlights are used to blind pilots so that they can film the resulting plane crashes.

Babs: "It takes a group of highly-paid network executives YEARS to come up with a TV show!"
Buster: "Which means it should take US... about as long as this next commercial break!"

  • In a segment featuring instructions on how to make your own cartoon, Buster comments after a long list of writers, animators and other personnel.

Buster: And one guy who does nothing except sign his name on it! [Steven Spielberg falls onto the top of the pile.]

  • Invader Zim had a minor character named 'Nick' who was created as a symbol for Nickelodeon. Nick had various disturbing science experiments performed on him by the main character. Considering that Nick was perpetually happy, it might be a jab at how Nickelodeon disliked the dark stuff Zim was putting out, instead living in an eternally happy rainbow land.
  • Yet another Fox example occurred from J Jonah Jameson on Spider-Man: The Animated Series: "All the networks are laughing at me. Even FOX!"
  • In the "Cartoon Wars" episodes of South Park, the creators had a very public disagreement with Comedy Central over their right to visually portray the Islamic prophet Mohammad in their show, after a French satirical magazine was fire-bombed by terrorists for doing just that. The episode is essentially an extended debate between freedom of speech (in regards to comedy and satire) and censorship in the name of political correctness. During the scene where Mohammad was supposed to appear, South Park inserted a neutral title card stating (truthfully) that Comedy Central had ultimately refused to allow Mohammad to be show. The irony was that South Park had featured Mohammad as a character in the episode "Super Best Friends" and had him hidden in the title sequence of the show for the last two seasons.
  • When ever an evil corporation is mentioned in Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law, a little neon sign turns on the background saying "An AOL/TimeWarner company."

Reducto: No! [pulls out a complicated schematic] There is no government, just a few multi-national corporations that run everything.
[The words "An AOL/Time Warner Co." appear on the bar's sign in the background.]

  • Aqua Teen Hunger Force:
    • After the original version of the episode was rejected for not meeting Broadcast Standards and Practices guidelines, the episode "Gee Whiz" was rewritten to be an extended slam of said organization, complete with a filmstrip about network standards that ends by congratulating the viewer for making "a bland show that no one can relate to".
    • A filmstrip that makes its point by showing the incorrect and then the correct way to blow a nun's head off.
    • Another example in the one hundredth episode has Shake trying to push the show's merchandise at the Adult Swim Shop, saying they "sell all our stuff for more than you can buy in other places."
    • In another example, Shake tells Meatwad that he can no longer watch Futurama because "we're too cheap to get it".
  • On Undergrads, one character remarks to Nitz that a concert might not be so bad since Good Charlotte is headlining. Nitz asks what Good Charlotte have done that he should care about. Good Charlotte provided the theme song to the show, which actually plays in the background of the scene to drive the point home.
  • The King of the Hill episode "Enrique-ciliable Differences" shows Hank locking out the Fox network and generally disparaging the quality of programming on it.
  • The 1988 Mighty Mouse episode "Anatomy Of A Milquetoast" had Mighty Mouse on trial for the disappearance of orphan Scrappy, using season 1 footage with the dialogue altered as evidence. A dialogue-changed scene from "It's Scrappy's Birthday" had Scrappy's boxcar companion Slappy Rimshot reuniting with some hobo friends, to which Slappy says "Hey, look. The network boards are here!"
    • The ending of "Don't Touch That Dial" is probably the show's Crowning Moment of Awesome. After chastizing a toddler for vegetating to "electronic pablum," Mighty Mouse turns to us and says "But enough of all this lying and hypocrisy. Time for what television's really about." Cut to commercial.
  • The beginning of "Tortoise Beats Hare" has Bugs Bunny reading the credits out loud. He blows his top after seeing the cartoon title:

Bugs: (angrily) Why dese guys don't know what they're talkin' about, the big buncha joiks! (smugly) I oughta know. I woik for 'em.

  • "Blooper Bunny" has Daffy Duck kvetching about his role in the Bugs Bunny 51½ anniversary special:

Daffy: Who writes this slop?! (Groans) Warner Brothers doesn't have a creative bone in their...

  • After ReBoot was dropped by ABC the show retroactively dubbed Megabyte's forces "Armored Binome Carriers. Which leads to the line:

It's the ABC's, they've turned on us!
Treacherous Dogs.

  • Duckman frequently made jabs at the USA Network.
  • Eek! The Cat has an episode of Eek visiting his own production studio, to find out that series writers are treated as slaves, being forced to write to the point of getting crazy of it and haven't seen the outside world for a long time and that executives will do anything to get their way, including riding them over with a steamroller.
  • The years when Daria was on the N! network... whose other shows oozed the same dumb popularity-obsessed teen attitude that Daria mocked.
  • Rocky and Bullwinkle has been known to poke fun at their producers on occasion. Example:

Rocky: Bullwinkle, I'm worried.
Bullwinkle: Ratings down in the show again?
Rocky: No.
Bullwinkle: That's odd.
Rocky: I'm worried because there have already been two attempts on your life.
Bullwinkle: Oh, don't worry. We will be renewed.
Rocky: I'm not talking about the Bullwinkle Show.
Bullwinkle: You had better; we could use the publicity.

  • Another example, as Boris and Natasha look for an A-bomb to blow open a giant trunk:

Rocky: They said A-bomb! Do you know what that means, Bullwinkle?
Bullwinkle: Sure. "A bomb" is what some people call our show!
Rocky: (miffed) I didn't think that was very funny.
Bullwinkle: (looking to camera) Neither did they, apparently.

  • In one scene from Amphibia (a cartoon produced by Disney) Polly goes into a store in the mall where kids can construct their own stuffed animals. After perusing the available pieces, she finds a nose-mouth piece that resembles that of Mickey Mouse. "Eh, no thanks," she says and tosses it aside.

Oh look, another "witty" self-demonstrating stinger to show that All The Tropes is dumber – more informal! – than The Other Wiki. Joy.