http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/TruthInTelevision
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Once in a while, a TV show does something that actually happens inReal Life. Don't worry, it never lasts, and they soon slip back into theirold habits. Rarely, other shows pick up on this, and you then get a recurringtrope that accurately reflects the real world. Listed below, for your convenience, are some examples of those.The Dark Side of this trope occurs inRipped from the Headlines.
When it's the exact opposite, you've got a bad case ofReality Is Unrealistic. If people fall for it, it is becauseTV Never Lies or, in the case of media conventions that audiences come to take for granted,The Coconut Effect.
Since they are technically truth, these tropes do not need to beJustified. However, writers may actually throw in justifications on the assumption thatViewers Are Morons.
The Bastard Spawn of these two tropes gives usInspired by… andVery Loosely Based on a True Story.
There's aSliding Scale of Truth in Television frequency. In one end, the amount of times the said trope is Truth in Television (based on well-known cases) can be counted with fingers of one hand (for example,Air-Vent Passageway). On the other end of the scale, these tropes happen very frequently in Real Life (likeBerserk Button).
Another way of saying the above is that a great many things happen on television that have happened at least once to someone in the world. The reason they become tropes — and remember the principle ofTropes Are Tools here — is because they're used in TV (et al) alot, and generally in ways that wouldn't mesh well in Real Life. So, for instance, it's certainly the case that special agents have worn Lycra (or similar) bodysuits, that people have squeezed themselves through air ducts, and that some people are cripplingly afraid of small spaces. This does not make the protagonist with aSpy Catsuit, making anAir-Vent Passageway escape but hampered by herFatal Flaw of claustrophobia an example of Truth in Television. To extend this even further, if we only ever saw those tropes being used together or in similarly improbable combinations,none of them would qualify as Truth because they wouldn't have ever been used in a way that was, well, Truthful. They've been hyperbolized, exaggerated and stretched to be much more exciting and dramatic than Real Life, and in doing so hardly resemble it any more at all. Which is why they're Tropes.
Also, because something may be Truth in Television does not mean we necessarily want Real Life examples of it. If a trope is listed both here and onNo Real Life Examples, Please!, that means that while its occurrence is definitely possible or even common in Real Life, listing the examples would either be too exhaustive,pointless because in real life it is just a meaningless event with no relevance,too controversial because Real Life is subjective, or tooNSFW because it is asex tropeand while true, descriptions would be too upsetting, not Family-Friendly,or too gossipy.
A good example would be any trope related toreligion or its practice: for example, theApocalypse Cult andScam Religion are both unfortunately Truth in Television, yet it's often subjective (e.g. people thinking all religions are scams, or all religions but their own are), and even in the cases where it's objectively proven (e.g. the group committed mass suicide with notes about an apocalypse, or arrests/litigation uncovered objective fraud) leveling the accusation ishighly insulting.
Lastly, keep in mind that some of the tropes indexed here arealso indexed underTelevision Is Trying to Kill Us. Not all tropes that are Truth in Television are safe to attempt in the real world unless you're a well-trained professional (even then, there are things that even a professional would never try to do). So when in doubt,Don't Try This at Home.
And that's how television works. So please, before adding anything to the list below or describing any existing tropes as Truth in Television, think for a moment: is or was this used in TV kinda like it really happened? Or is there maybe kind of a lot of hyperbole on one side or the other of the equation to make it fit? If the answer to the first question is a definite yes...Go right ahead.
CompareTropes Examined by the MythBusters,Shown Their Work, andSurprisingly Realistic Outcome, some of which proves that they're Truth in Television. ContrastLife Imitates Art andReality Is Unrealistic.
Spaceballs and the Lorax are shown to have air in cans and bottles being sold in their worlds that are suffering from severe pollution and that the citizens need to buy them just to breathe for survival. As discussed by the YouTuber named "Double Chen News" in the video, this phenomenon unfortunately happens in real life in a lot of countries in the world, same with unclean food and unclean water.
Example of:
Defictionalization
Spaceballs and the Lorax are shown to have air in cans and bottles being sold in their worlds that are suffering from severe pollution and that the citizens need to buy them just to breathe for survival. As discussed by the YouTuber named "Double Chen News" in the video, this phenomenon unfortunately happens in real life in a lot of countries in the world, same with unclean food and unclean water.
How well does it match the trope?
Example of:
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