A Emmy Award-winningWarner Bros cartoon,Xiaolin Showdown (2003-2006) follows the adventures of four teens (well, three teens and one child) selected to become the nextXiaolinDragons:
Along with their standard monk training, they are tasked byMaster Fung to collect mystical Xiaolin artifacts known as the Shen Gong Wu, which were scattered around the world by theoriginal Xiaolin Dragon, Dashi, and Dojo Kanojo Cho, acowardlysize-shifting dragon. Whenever two (or more) peopleenter a standoff over a Wu, aXiaolin Showdown occurs, with the winner taking all the gambled Shen Gong Wu.
All-Star Cast: The show has some of Western Animation's most famous voice acting names in it. SeeHey, It's That Voice! on the Trivia page for details.
Ambiguously Gay: Jack has more than a few girly atributes. As well as a somewhat suspect admiration for Chase Young. He did call himself a queen, and in the evil future where he takes over? He apparently has Chase Young constantly being tied up in nothing but his underwear, dripping wet, and with yellow paint being slathered on his abs.
Well, he seems more ambiguously bi than anything, since in the evil future, Jack had Wuya hanging on the wall wearing a short cheerleader outfit, and in an earlier episode he created countless cheerleader androids and enjoyed kissing one, so yeah.
Anime Accent Absence: Western example: Grey DeLisle uses her typical American pre-teen voice for Kimiko, although her character is born and bred in Japan.
Animesque: The show's Chinese setting, the constantface faults, the kung fu movie-like plot and the Asian-like art style. Not a surprise, since the show's creator is Chinese.
Art Evolution: The second and third seasons' animation improves significantly from the first.
Art Shift: The flashback of Guan's fight against Chase is shown in a sketchy, black-and-white, but otherwise more realistic art style.
Artifact of Doom: The Sapphire Dragon, the only wu we see that can act on its own, and easily one of the scariest. Its breath turns people into sapphire statues, which it can then control once it grows powerful enough. The Heart of Jong may also qualify.
As Long as There Is Evil: A theme at the ending of the series is that no matter how many times the monks defeat evildoers, as long as there are people in the world, evil will never truly be defeated. The last two episodes are even called "Time After Time" which implies this theme even more.
Master Fung says that evil is never defeated, it merely changes its path and form.
Atlantis: An aside mention from Master Fung revealed that Dojo is the main reason Atlantis sunk in the first place, due to being evil at the time. It later appears,is overrun with giant spiders, and is destroyed to lock the spiders away.
Bash Brothers: The Xiaolin warriors, who have actually used more than a few of the moves described on the trope page. Clay and Raimundo also enjoy this kind of relationship.
Beat Still My Heart: Chase Young rips out the "heart" of one of Wuya's rock monsters.
Belligerent Sexual Tension: Raimundo and Kimiko, even filling the correctcharactertypes. Although the attraction is seldom played up, the episode "Dream Stalker" makes it perfectly clear that Raimundo is interested in Kimiko.
Big Ego, Hidden Depths: Omi, Raimundo, and Kimiko each get at least one of these, which are described in greater detail on their character pages.
Bishonen: Chase Young. Especially 1500 years ago,inTime After Time, when we first see what he looked like when he was a Xiaolin monk.
YMMV Most of the female fanbase sees Jack Spicer as this.
Bizarrchitecture: A Xiaolin Showdown warps the competitors (and their friends) into a just-plain-surreal version of their surroundings. We never find out what this looks like to people outside the Showdown area.
Blunt Metaphors Trauma: ARunning Gag with Omi. Raimundo eventually turns this into a threat: "What Omi did to that sentence is what we're going to do to you!"
Omi: I command you to spill your internal organs now! Jack: What kind of sick people are you?! Raimundo: I think he means "spill your guts".
Bolivian Army Ending: Has thewhole rogue gallery outside of the monks' base, waiting to attack them. Though it's in no way a tragic ending, we all know the monks are gonna kickall their asses, and do it in style.
Book Ends: The very first Xiaolin Showdown in the series is fought for the Eye of Dashi. So is the very last.
Brain Bleach: Kimiko feels the need to wash her brain out when she learns Jack's been invading the group's dreams with the Shadow of Fear. All of the monks have this reaction when they walk in on Dojo clipping Master Fung's toenails.
Breaking the Fourth Wall:Literally. During the theme song, Dojo spirals in toward the camera before crashing into it. The screen shatters and falls away, revealing the next part. Also, in Episode 8 he tries hiding in the bars below the screen. It doesn't work.
Raimundo: Where have I heard that before? Oh, yeah. "Previously, onXiaolin Showdown." (Raimundo holds open his eyes wider which shows the Xiaolin Showdown logo.) (Everybody grins and gives a thumbs up or two to the camera.)
Breath Weapon: Dojo (though he needs a little fuel for it to qualify as a weapon) and the Sapphire Dragon.
Brilliant but Lazy: Dashi is implied to be this at first; when Omi first meets him, he would rather sleep than help him. Also, Raimundo.
Butt Monkey: Jack, all the time. He's constantly abused by everyone, even people on the same team as him. Incidentally, the Monkey Staff is his favorite Wu.
Calling Your Attacks: Everyone, but also played for laughs with Omi and Chase's kung fu attack names. A few examples of many: Duck Flipping Burgers, Sparrow Eating Hot Dog, andDogs Playing Poker.
Raimundo: Okay, they've gotta be making some of these up.
Card-Carrying Villain: Every villain explicitly announces themselves as evil, and practically revels in being so - evenRaimundo and Omi did so during their brief stints on the side of evil.
Cassandra Truth: Raimundo, frequently, to the other monks. Although they seldom have a valid reason to doubt him, his reputation as an impulsiveJerkass hedonist (albeit one with aheart of gold) often makes them skeptical of him. Related toThe Complainer Is Always Wrong.
Catgirl: Katnappe; not an actual cat girl but cat-themed, so she still qualifies.
Cerebus Syndrome: After the arrival ofChase Young, the show became more of an action/drama than an action/comedy. Admittedly, this was still an action/drama withregularfart jokes.
Character Name Alias: Chase Young is known at least to a couple other characters as the Prince of Darkness...there was another guy who had the same alias as that. He was the guy who got kicked out of the big, shiny house by his dad and is also known as the "Father of Lies" and "The Roaring Lion."
In a Season 2 episode, Clay is seen playing witha number of dolls (most of them resembleTransformers dressed as cowboys, along with a dinosaur and a covered wagon). This isfunny enough on its own, but they reappear in "Life and Times of Hannibal Roy" (Season 3, Episode 3) being played with by Raimundo, Kimiko, and Omi.
At one point, Clay rambles aboutthe desiccation process spiders use to feed. At the monks' strange looks, he replies, "What? A cowboy can't have a hobby?" Then, some dozen or so episodes later:
Clay: Nothin' I dislike more than a smart-alecTersiops truncatus. (Beat) Bottlenose dolphin.
The whole "What? A cowboy can't X?" is actually aRunning Gag, albeit an infrequent one.
Chekhov's Hobby: Clay's ability to use a lasso comes into play constantly.
Chekhov's Skill: The monks are shown using Shen Gong Wu to play a giant game of chess in an episode during the second season. Two dozen episodes later, Raimundo plays a giant game of chess in a Showdown in which he uses the same Wu.
Clap Your Hands If You Believe: Le Mime can create invisible objects just by thinking about them. However, once he's made them, other people can also influence them, something Kimiko and Omi realize when Raimundo pretends to rattle the "bars" on the box, which they didn't know existed until then. Omi then imagines a door for them.
Water:Blue. Interestingly, Omi is often associated withcherry red (and yellow, obviously).
Wind: White, but alsogreen. Raimundo hasGreen Eyes and wears predominantly white and green.
Fire:Red. Of course, Kimiko's wardrobechanges too often for her to be associated with a particular color.
Earth: Brown, but also green (brown doesn't make for a good color whenPower Glows). However, Clay is often associated with sky blue, which seems to have its foundation in colors as personality theory[2]
The Complainer Is Always Wrong: Being something of ajerk, Raimundo gets this a lot, buthe isn't always wrong, at least not in the traditional sense - typically, his "complaints" are sympathetic if not outright justified, and the others suffer for ignoring his concerns just as much as he does for refusing to compromise.
Raimundo seems to have a good memory - his subconscious in "Dream Stalker" contains nods to numerous earlier episodes (the mansion Wuya gave him, Kimiko's kimono and her outfit from "The Return of Pandabubba," and Hannibal Bean turning into the final boss from Goo Zombies 4, among others).
An example is in the episode "Shadow of Fear", Jack enters the temple to steal the Shen Gong Wu. Omi shouts "Jack Spicer!" and Jack replies "In the flesh." More famously, this is what Wuya said when she first returned to her solid form all the way back in episode 13.
Also, in episode 48, Chucky Choo is the dragon referenced in Dojo's story about the friend who stole his "family yo-yo", episode 36.
Guan: Since Raimundo insists on behaving like a clown, he should have a clown's name. He will be calledBobo![3] Rai: Bobo?! Guan:YOU LOOKIN' AT ME, BOBO?!
Turned out to be aSubversion:Raimundo was theReverse Mole and the whole thing, including the punishment, was a set up to make Hannibal Bean believe that Raimundo could be turned to his side.
Jack built one thatturned into a mecha for the New York episode. Dojo briefly shapeshifted into an organic train to keep up with it, but he prefers to avoid doing so -- that third rail really chafes.
In "Treasure of a Blind Swordsman", Jack robs the protagonists and makes his getaway on a flying train. The monks catch up later, leading to multiple fights atop the train.
Crazy Jealous Dragon: Dojo has certainissues with living apart from Master Fung for any length of time. Particularly evident when Fung temporarily hires a new female dragon assistantand when Good!Jack starts doing all of Dojo's jobs.
Creepy Child:Heylin!Omi while kicking Raimundo and Clay's asses. He gets even creepier when he speaks:
An ongoing part of the series revolved around Omi thinking he was better than everyone else and that he was the most deserving of becoming the new Xiaolin Dragon. Arguably, the two-part series finale was dedicated to showing how incredibly misplaced these beliefs were. Omi's special blend of ego and naivetecaused nearly all of the problems in the finale, and although he ultimately righted the situation, it was only withRaimundo's determination, leadership, and planning that anything went right.
Ditzy Genius: Jack can build small armies of robots, transforming trains anda working time machine, but is laughably bad at being a supervillain and almost everything that doesn't involve robots.Of course, there is hisFuture Badass self.
Kimiko: I can't understand a single word dem folks are singing about. And I use the term "singing" miighty loosely. Clay: I donot talk like that! Do I?
Does This Remind You of Anything?: The Woozy Shooter makes whoever gets hit by it "goofy," aka extremely high and delirious. Complete withacid trip visuals. Dojo explicitly refers to it as emitting apurplehaze that makes its victims so "goofy."
Kimiko:(giggle) You know, if I wasn't me(snort) I could be... (Beat)Somebody else!(psychotic giggle)
Easter Egg: A yin-yang is hidden in every episode.
Easy Come, Easy Go: The Shen Gong Wu change hands very quickly, preventing any side from gaining a real advantage. SeeFailure Is the Only Option. In one episode, Dojo is found to be confused about the status of all the Wu, attempting to chart it all down on a big whiteboard.
The Monkey Staff gives you the agility and balance of a monkey, and an increasing number of other monkey attributes the longer you hold onto it (starting with a tail).
Monkey!Jack is arguably more dangerous than normal Jack.
Evil Counterpart: Chase Young to Master Monk Guanthanks to Hannibal Bean.
Evil Gloating: Jack's favorite pastime. Also indulged in by the other villains, though less so by theBig Bads, especially Chase Young.
Eviler Than Thou: Chase, Wuya, and Hannibal all the time to each other (and Jack, who occasionally gets in on the action).
Exty Years From Now: Subverted and lampshaded when Dojo turns evil for an episode.
Master Fung: It has already begun: a thousand years ofdarkness! Kimiko: Why a thousand? Master Fung: It is actually 962 years, but "a thousand" sounds more ominous.
Face Heel Turn: Chase Young and Guan by Hannibal Bean (but seperate occasions). Chase Young had his first out of immortality, but he's proven to be moreevil than Hannibal Bean. Omi went back in time to prevent this. It worked, but it wound up making Guan making his face heel turn. However, Chase had no choice but to have a face heel turn himself.
Flanderization: In the first season, Omi's sizable ego was clearly shown to be the result of his youth and lack of social skills.[4] From the second season onward, Omi's ego became his defining characteristic rather than a side-effect of his other traits.
A specific example: Omi's "sexism" towards Kimiko was originally a one-off gag in episode 3 playing on his naivete. He had no idea that his words were offensive or even incorrect. In season 2, Omi developed an actual sexist attitude towards Kimiko and insulted her with full awareness that she would be offended, but only when he was jealous or mad at her for some reason.
Omi has repeatedly abused Raimundo with this as well, bringing up the fact that Raimundo has betrayed the team, and took him the longest to be promoted anytime it is convenient to kick Raimundo down.And it usually happens when Rai is right next to him.
Genius Bruiser: Clay's hobbies include animal identification, taxonomy, trivia, etc. Sadly, this never becomes aChekhov's Hobby (though it is used as aChekhov's Gag, above).
Genre Savvy: Raimundo, who enjoys lampshading whenever it "sounds like end of the world time again."
When the monks fail to open the Treasure of the Blind Swordsman, Raimundo'sGenre Savvy enables him to recognize that the blind old man was "talking like the Fung-meister". He subsequently figures out the koan and successfully opens the Treasure.
Go-Karting with Bowser: After theirteam-up to defeat Wuya in the season 2 opener, Omi tries to convince Jack to switch sides permanently. Jack isn't persuaded, but suggests they go out for ice cream sometime when they're not fighting over Wu ("My treat."). Sadly, we never actually see this.
At the start of season three,while a temporarily disabled Master Fung fends off Chase Young alone. Whilst in a wheelchair. And typing out his attacks with chopsticks on a laptop.
Also the blind old man guarding the Treasure of the Blind Swordsman.
Hands Play in Theater: In "Dream Stalker," when Raimundo dreams he's watching a movie with Kimiko.
Hannibal Lecture: True to his name, Hannibal Bean uses these often. Sometimes he succeeds, sometimes he doesn't.
Subverted in Jack's case. While he does betray the team it's revealed that he did honestly make a genuine effort at being a hero.
The Yin and Yang Yo-Yos separately also constitute revolving doors, as shown in the showdown between Kimiko and Wuya in which they switch between good and evil several times.
In the first part of the series finalethe elderly Xiaolin Warriors during, and the alternate Chase in part two, allowing himself to become evil in order to help restore the timeline.
Good Jack does the same thing in "Finding Omi," allowing himself to be turned evil again in order to save the others' chi. During thesame sacrifice, Good Jack uses the Ring Of Nine Dragons to split himself up into two, and one pulls another sacrifice for the other, holding back a monster in the Ying Yang World while the other retrieves the chi and leaves (turning evil in the process). This has the result of making regular Jack evenmore evil than usual, though in general it doesn't end up mattering much.
In the warped future where Jack rules the planet and Chase Young is good, Chase agrees to turn evil to buy the Dragons time to find the frozen Omi and revert the world to normalcy.
Horde of Alien Locusts: TheGiant Spiders from "Dangerous Minds". According to Master Fung: "The spiders are neither good nor evil. They are simply...consumers. They consume vegetation, animals, buildings, even the earth itself. They eat until there is nothing left to eat."
Incredible Shrinking Man: The Changing Chopsticks shrink the user to the size of a grain of rice.
Incredibly Lame Pun: Thrown left and right. The worst offenders are Clay and Katnappe, though.
Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain: Jack, of course.Subverted in the first part of the series finale when he actually succeeds in taking over the world, imprisoning both the monks and the much more powerful bad guys.
Informed Ability: Hannibal Bean is made out to be the worst possible evil there could ever be but he never succeeds in a single venture. Even his one accomplishment,turning Chase Young evil, didn't work out how he wanted.
On the otherhand, he actually succeeded in causing a character to undergo aFace Heel Turn (two, technically, even if one was in an alternate timeline) that they never reverted from, which Chase Young and Wuya had both tried and failed to do on multiple occasions, and is Chase's equal in combat when the two actually fight. So this may have some truth in it after all.
Intangible Man: The power of the Serpent's Tail, and one of the effects of Raimundo combining the Sword of the Storm and the Eye of Dashi.
Ironic Echo:In the same scene: after losing Omi back to the side of good, Chase Young claims that after tasting evil, Omi wouldn'tbe able to resist the next time, claiming "I believe the evil in you is stronger than you know." When Omi turns around and apologizes to his friends for not using the secret to defeating evil when he had the chance instead of abiding by his word, Chase admits that he caused Omi to see the secret to defeating good instead, and thus not abiding his word would have been catastrophic. Omi then points out that telling him that was uncharacteristically good of him, claiming "I believe the good in you is stronger than you know" and taking his leave.
Laser-Guided Karma: In "Bird of Paradise," the monks save a little old lady rather than try to capture the Bird. Guess what the little old lady turns out to be?
Leitmotif: Several. Omi has a very prominent one, and some other characters (like Wuya, whose is dark and sinister, or Good Jack, whoseTastes Like Diabetes as much as he does) have themes that occasionally play. In addition, all four of the Dragons get brief motifs in the theme song.
Lampshaded by Jack who tries to create his own theme and subsequently takes advice from Dojo on how to improve it.
Lethal Joke Item: The Changing Chopsticks give their user the ability to... shrink to the size of a rice corn. Jack uses them to steal almost all of the monks' Wus. Successfully.
In the second episode, the monks are competing to get the fastest time on a circular obstacle course (the aim being to get past the obstacles and rescue a toy dog). Clay just turns around and picks it up.
Near the end of the first season, Omi and Jack have a showdown that involves holding a glass of water "without spilling a drop". Jack uses the Monkey Staff and holds it with his tail. After a few near-misses, Omi just swallows the water, catches up to Jack, and then spits it back into the glass once he's won.
Master Fung's jade elephant test. The goal was for the monks to grab the jade elephant, but when they get close to doing so Fung just smashes it, making them fail.
MacGuffin Melee: One of the central premises of the series, especially when the showdowns had mulitple players.
Magic Mirror: The Reversing Mirror. It has no effect in and of itself, but instead reverses the effect of another Shen Gong Wu. So when Wuya uses it with the Serpent's Tail...
Some episodes have shown it to have deflecting properties as well, though this is limited to Wu effects, such as making the Eye of Dashi zap the wielder and not the target.
Magic Skirt: Kimiko has one especially during the Dragon X-Kumai/Wudai Orion sequences (she's upside down).
Making a Splash: Omi's primary abilities. Also the primary use of the Orb of Tornami, so Omi uses it a lot.
Meaningful Name: Chase Young, who traded his soul for power and eternal youth. Hannibal Roy Bean, named for colorful Texas judge Roy Bean and, well, the fact heis a bean shaped creature. And even Master Monk Guan's name may be a reference to the general/war hero Guan Yu, who is famous in China for his role in the civil war that led to the collapse of the Han Dynasty.
Memetic Mutation: In-universe, Jack's constant failures cause "I got Jacked" to be the hip thing to say when one loses everything.
The Mind Is a Plaything of the Body: In his monstrous form, Chase Young is much more aggressive, energetic and expressive, a marked change for a character who is usuallyThe Stoic.
Mobile Suit Human: Hannibal Bean'sgiant, spiky armor which he first appears in. He's quickly revealed to be only an inch tall. Thenhe gets theMoby Morpher and you only see it once again, as he's actually more effective as a giant version of his true self and doesn't need it.
Mooks: Well, itis a a fighting series. Jack Spicer's robots are usually theButt Monkeys of the series.
Lampshaded.
Wuya: Why do you build these stupid machines?! They're useless! Jack: Mom said I needed a hobby.
Moral Dissonance: The Xiaolin warriors once beat up Jack and stole his belt, shoe, a huge chunk of his hair and hisunderwear as part of a bet. And while the hair isn't really stolen, it becomes a little disturbing when you realized that Clayripped it off of Jack's head.
The Third Arm Sash, especially when Clay turns it into a flexible stone fist.
There's also an episode where the team faces an animate snowman. Omi knocks off the monsters arms and makes a quip about disarming him. Cue six new arms sprouting.
Mundane Made Awesome: Often, the characters use flashy and over-the-top martial arts or magical skills to do fairly mundane things - chores, games, you name it. Applies to several of the showdowns as well, which brings simple contests into insanely impressive magical arenas.
Special mention goes to "Something Jermaine," where Jermaine and Omi have a fight which escalates into a competition to see who caneat dinner in the most impressive way. Point goes to Jermaine for stealing Omi's rice by bending his spoon and tossing it like a boomerang. In slow motion.
Mundane Solution: In the same episode as hisLoophole Abuse, Clay wins a sparrow-catching showdown by gathering seeds for it while Jack flies around trying to grab it with the Third Arm Sash.
Never Sleep Again: During one episode, every time Raimundo falls asleep, a giant jellyfish monster attacks the temple and nearly destroys everything, then disappears instantly when he wakes up. After several sad attempts to keep him awake, he falls asleep again, the monster comes back and a sort ofBattle in the Center of the Mind}} ensues.
EvenMaster Fung managed to do thisby provoking Raimundo'sFace Heel Turn. Sure, Fung's mistake was caused byanother, earlier incident ofNice Job Breaking It, Herowhen Raimundo disobeyed his orders, but still, you'd think anOld Master would know better.
Offhand Backhand: Raimundo is fond of this, even using it outside of its standard combat application (for example, he offhand-backhands a tree in "The Demon Seed" to jostle free the Wu in one of the branches, winning the showdown withstyle in the process).
Poster Gallery Bedroom: Any shot of the Xiaolin warriors' bedroom stalls: Kimiko's has a large clothing rack and a desk with her electronics, Raimundo's is crammed with sporting equipment, Clay's has a handful of cowboy-related items, and Omi's has some minimalist Asian-esque decoration.
The Power of Friendship: TheCentral Theme of the series that was (in general) explored more seriously and less anviciously than in the average children's cartoon.
Psycho Serum: The Lao Mang Long Soup. Gives unimaginable power. Side effects may include: evil, loss of emotion, disfiguring mutation, metamorphosis into amonstrous creature (which results in dependency on the soup to keep oneself human), anda penchant for spikes.
She Cleans Up Nicely: Kimiko in her kimono from the episode "Tangled Web" - although the moment (complete with eye-widening and gulping) actually happens in "Dream Stalker," when Raimundo sees her in his subsconscious.
There is a scene that can be seen as Clay/Kimiko in which Clay catches Kim before she islit on fire and she blushes and giggles in a 'My Hero' sort of way.
In another episode, when Omi is complaining that the warriors are sitting around taking care of some pig, Clay says, "It's not justsome pig!"
Chase Young has some things in common withShang Tsung.
In "The New Order", Jack has the Cyclops grab Chase Young when he's paying attention to Omi to grab the Shen Gong Wu and says:"Say hello to my little friend".
Slapstick Knows No Gender: Or age, for that matter - all of the main characters, even Kimiko, get roughed up a fair bit both humorously over the top and not on a constant basis, in a medium which usually wouldn't use them for extreme slapstick, being teens and all.
Snowlems: The Heart of Jong creates an especially nasty one. "All that upper body strengthand a killerEvil Laugh!"
Some Kind of Force Field: Averted with Le Mime - his boxes are constantly invisible, even when you walk into them. They're also soundproof, so Clay has no idea why the others aren't speaking until Rai goads him into walking into it. Rai then spoofs the stock phrase as he sees Clay's reaction: "It's...some...sort...of...in-vi-suh-ble-box. Ai, took him long enough."
The Xiaolin Dragons walking in on Dojo clipping Master Fung's toenails.
And the, ah, awkward bathtub moment between Dojo and Chucky Choo.
Spikes of Villainy: Chase Young, in spades - a running gag has a character be near him, only for spikes to pop out of his clothes and scare them. This happens to hisunderwear at one point.
Stone Wall: The Two-Ton Tunic makes the bearer impervious to all attacks, but its weight and encumbrance reduces their agility by a lot (though the Reversing Mirror can negate this drawback if used in combination with it.)
Surprise Checkmate:Justified in "Oil in the Family" because the T-Rex isn't playing to win: it's trying to trap/knock out Raimundo with the giant chess pieces so it can eat him. Raimundo, meanwhile, is focusing on the checkmating the T-Rex to win the showdown.
The Sands of Time allows one to travel through time at will (which is why it's never kept by the monks). Omi travels back to the past in the first season finale, ended upTrapped in the Past coming back byThe Slow Path.
Unholy Matrimony: Initially, Chase Young and Wuya have problems in their alliance (namely, she hasChronic Backstabbing Disorder), but by the end of the third season, they've decided to stop arguing andstay together for the sake of evil.
Verbal Tic: In "Hear Some Evil, See Some Evil", Kimiko can't stand the way Clay talks.
Clay: Omi, that's about as lowdown as a snake's bellybutton! Kimiko: Snakes don't have bellybuttons!
Voluntary Shapeshifting: Dojo, though he mainly uses it to switch from gecko-size to full-blown-dragon.
Vile Villain Saccharine Show The villains in every season finale, Human Wuya from the first season, Chase Young for the second one andFuture Jack for the third
We Win Because You Did Not: Master Fung challenges the monks to take a jade elephant from him, then takes out a mallet and breaks it when it looks like they're winning. This leads Omi to send the Golden Tiger Claws to the Earth's core at the end of the episode.
Welcome Back, Traitor:Raimundo, although he saved the day at the last minute. The other monks don't make too much fuss, although it's occasionally rubbed in his face,and part of Master Monk Guan's secret plan in a later episode involves him pretending to do it again.
Wham! Line: For the lead-up to the first season finale, Master Fung afterRaimundo steals the Serpent's Tail.
Kimiko: It's Spicer! He took the seed! Clay: Andthe hot dogs! (runs after, losinghis hat in the process andnot even caring) Come back here with them doggies, you no-good low-down snake, you yellow-bellied dirty little sidewinderI'M GON' GET YOU!
Wouldn't Hit a Girl: Clay. It's usually his downfall whenever up against Wuya or Katnappe (though he could bear-hug the latter long enough for Omi to grab the Tiger Claws).
Raimundo: Clay, man, haven't you heard? Chivalry is dead.
You Will Know What to Do: Somewhat subverted in the first season finale; Master Dashi's new puzzle box "will only open when the one who needs to open it, opens it."
↑Roughly, "Ready, Set, Go!" or literally, "Begin the showdown!"
↑Namely, a"blue" personality maps to traits associated with most Earth signs in Western astrology, such as calmness, aversion to change, and sincerity.
↑"Bobo" is both Spanish and Portuguese slang for an idiot or fool.
↑Basically, Omi is shown with underdevelopedempathy. Like a young child, he cannot view the world fromany perspective other than his own. Think about how a toddler might blurt out, "Mommy, why is that man so fat?" without any regard for the man's feelings, or how a four-year-old might be bewildered by someone who holds a different opinion than his own. The child has no awareness of others as individuals and instead views them as extensions or reflections of himself.