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* BrainlessBeauty: Kelly is a somewhat sympathetic version, although [[spoiler:she ends up murdered.]]

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* BlatantLies: During the summation, Coleridge assures [[spoiler:Sally]] that she was never a suspect even though he viewed her with strong suspicion in the early sections (although this is partially a PetTheDog moment, given all of the grief and suspicion the character has gone through).
* BrainlessBeauty: The stunning but unimaginative Kelly is a somewhat sympathetic version, although [[spoiler:she ends up murdered.]]


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* IDoNotLikeGreenEggsAndHam: Coleridge recalls griping when Hooper first installed a water cooler in their office, as he considered it a dumb attempt to emulate American cop shows. Now, he privately thinks that having drinks of cool water while he ruminates is faster and more enjoyable than having tea all the time.
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* NobleBigotWithABadge: Inspector Coleridge makes some SlutShaming comments in the climax, can be quite sour when ranting about people who don't share his traditional religious beliefs (Trisha half-seriously compares him to a witch burner) and says that he doesn't get why gay people care about using the label gay even after Trisha points out that he'd just assume everyone was straight otherwise. However, he cares deeply about catching the murderer and is sympathetic and respectful to lesbian suspect Sally for the most part.
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Not edited by the get help with English thread. I put it in by mistake.


* NobleBigotWithABadge: Inspector Coleridge gets some SlutShaming coments in the climax, can be quite sour when ranting about people who don't share his traditional religious beliefs (Trisha half-seriously comapres him to a witch burner) and says that he doesn't get why gay people care about using the label gay even after Trisha points out that he'd just assume everyone was straight otherwise. However, he cares deeply about catching the murderer and is sympathetic and respectful to lesbian suspect Sally for the most part.
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Added DiffLines:

* NobleBigotWithABadge: Inspector Coleridge gets some SlutShaming coments in the climax, can be quite sour when ranting about people who don't share his traditional religious beliefs (Trisha half-seriously comapres him to a witch burner) and says that he doesn't get why gay people care about using the label gay even after Trisha points out that he'd just assume everyone was straight otherwise. However, he cares deeply about catching the murderer and is sympathetic and respectful to lesbian suspect Sally for the most part.

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* AnimalWrongsGroup: Woggle is a one-man example.
* BedlamHouse: Subverted in ''Dead Famous'' when a contestant on a reality TV show pretends to have been abused in a mental institution, in order to boost her appeal with the public. The producer knows this is a lie because both of her own parents were institutionalized, and decides not to broadcast the footage.

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* AnimalWrongsGroup: Woggle is a one-man example.
example. He beat up a teenaged kennel worker while releasing fox-hunting hounds and gets into a fight with people over his refusal to have a flea bath and kill the fleas.
* BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor:
** The contestants all hoped the reality show would give them fame and public exposure, only to get more than they could have imagined (and in unflattering ways) as a murder victim and murder suspects.
** Layla, the first person eliminated, finds herself being treated as a joke due to how unflattering the show made her.
** Because of the show, Woggle is publicly exposed as being wanted for beating up a teenaged girl during an animal rights protest, and is beaten up by a group of people who recognize him.
* BedlamHouse: Subverted in ''Dead Famous'' when a contestant on a reality TV show Moon pretends to have been abused in a mental institution, in order to boost her appeal with the public. The producer knows this is a lie because both of her own parents were institutionalized, and decides not to broadcast the footage.



* CannotConveySarcasm: Inspector Colebridge can spend a whole paragraph being "deeply sarcastic" during TheSummation without the ''hundreds of millions'' of people watching the televised event getting it. A good example of this is when he describes a hypothetical scenario where one of the eliminated reality show contestants tunnels back inside to commit a murder out of revenge.
--> ''The studio erupted. All around the world the press lines jammed. So Woggle had done it after all, the evil kicker of teenage girls had surpassed even his previous levels of brutality. "Of course it wasn't Woggle!" said Colebridge impatiently. "Good heavens, if that highly distinctive fellow had popped up through the carpet I think we would have noticed, don't you?"''



* DrivenToSuicide: [[spoiler:Sally]] attempts suicide on-camera when [[spoiler:she]] becomes a prime suspect in the murder. [[spoiler:She survives.]]

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* ContemptCrossfire: However much the other contestants may dislike each other, one thing that often unites them is their hostility towards Woggle, due to his horrible hygiene and pride at taking Social Security payments while being an anti-government anarchist (which rankles the others due to how their taxes help fund Social Security).
* ConvictedByPublicOpinion: [[spoiler:David and Sally]] are both suspected of the murder by the public and suffer a lot of harassment and stigma for it, but neither is guilty.
* CulturedBadass: Inspector Coleridge is an insightful investigator who had to regularly subdue rowdy drunks during his days as a beat cop. He is also a lay minister, gardens, subscribed to a distinguished poetry and non-fiction publisher, and is an amateur Shakespeare actor who shows some amazing showmanship during TheSummation. That said, he can be petulant at times in his dislike and incomprehension of modern pop culture.
* DrivenToSuicide: [[spoiler:Sally]] attempts suicide on-camera when [[spoiler:she]] becomes a prime suspect in the murder. [[spoiler:She survives.survives thanks to Jazz.]]



* GranolaGirl: Layla in ''Dead Famous''.
* HoldingTheFloor: In ''Dead Famous'', Inspector Coleridge talks on television for five and a half minutes to delay the end of the show so his colleagues can arrive with [[spoiler: faked]] evidence to prompt a confession from the murderer.
* {{Ladette}}: Kelly and Moon in ''Dead Famous'' fit the trope, with Geraldine referring to Kelly as "the little ladette slapper."
* SpotTheVictim: Invoked. The book focuses on police trying to solve a murder that took place on a reality TV show by watching tapes of the show. The identity of the victim is not revealed until the detectives reach that point in the tapes, about two-thirds of the way through the book.

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* GranolaGirl: Layla is an intellectual (at least in ''Dead Famous''.
her own mind) hippie with several liberal opinions.
* HiddenDepths: Not all of the contestants are quite the shallow twenty-something jerks they present themselves as. Apprentice Chef Jazz, who is mostly one of ThoseTwoGuys with slightly racist lout Garry, makes some smart points about consumerism while discussing toothbrushes in one scene and wants the fame the show is bringing him to help jumpstart a career as a comedian (which is part of why he is always making smart aleck comments).
* HoldingTheFloor: In ''Dead Famous'', Inspector Coleridge talks on television for five and a half minutes to delay the end of the show so his colleagues can arrive with [[spoiler: faked]] evidence to prompt a confession from the murderer.
* IWasYoungAndNeededTheMoney: Struggling pretentious actor David [[spoiler:pays his bills by appearing in hardcore porno flicks and is terrified that this getting out could ruin him, which is implied to indeed happen after the information leaks]].
*
{{Ladette}}: Kelly and Moon in ''Dead Famous'' fit the trope, with Geraldine referring to Kelly as "the little ladette slapper."
* ScrewThisImOuttaHere: David and Moon try to quit the reality show after the first eviction after the insufferable Woggle pulls an EliminationHoudini (the public votes on who leaves) and they realize Geraldine is editing the footage to slant events in his favor for the crowd for entertainment value. Geraldine (who needs every contestant to stay until the end of the show) convinces them to stay by hinting that something will happen to Woggle soon and then tips off the police that he is wanted for assault.
* SpotTheVictim: Invoked. The book focuses on police trying to solve a murder that took place on a reality TV show by watching tapes of the show. The identity of the victim is not revealed until the detectives reach that point in the tapes, about two-thirds of the way through the book.book.
* UnspokenPlanGuarantee : The Inspector clearly (and correctly) has a suspect in his sights well before TheSummation but never says who. Even when he comes up with a BluffingTheMurderer plan (about fifteen pages before naming the killer), none of the details are given beyond how the plan involves wigs. Things work perfectly and the murderer is CaughtOnTape confessing after the bluff (pretending to have a videotape of the killer preparing for the murder when really it is a disguised Constable Trisha) makes it seem like the police have evidence.
* VillainousLineage. Sally worries that she may be homicidal and have blackouts because her mother killed her father. [[spoiler:She is innocent and the police note insanity is far more likely to be inherited by the child when both parents are insane and not just one. Since both of Geraldine’s parents were mentally ill, Coleridge briefly notes that she could be too, although her murder scheme seems to be motivated by pure {{Greed}}.]]
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A 2001 Creator/BenElton novel set in an {{expy}} of ''Series/BigBrother'' called ''House Arrest''. A housemate is murdered onscreen in a reality TV show, but which one? Detective Coleridge must find the killer before they strike again.

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A 2001 Creator/BenElton novel set in an {{expy}} of ''Series/BigBrother'' called ''House Arrest''. A housemate is murdered onscreen in a reality TV show, but which one? And how can a murder be a mystery in a TV set house that's extensively watched by cameras at every moment? Detective Coleridge must find the killer before they strike again.
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* {{Ladette}}: Kelly and Moon in ''Dead Famous'' fit the trope, with Geraldine referring to Kelly as "the little ladette slapper."

to:

* {{Ladette}}: Kelly and Moon in ''Dead Famous'' fit the trope, with Geraldine referring to Kelly as "the little ladette slapper.""
* SpotTheVictim: Invoked. The book focuses on police trying to solve a murder that took place on a reality TV show by watching tapes of the show. The identity of the victim is not revealed until the detectives reach that point in the tapes, about two-thirds of the way through the book.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

A 2001 Creator/BenElton novel set in an {{expy}} of ''Series/BigBrother'' called ''House Arrest''. A housemate is murdered onscreen in a reality TV show, but which one? Detective Coleridge must find the killer before they strike again.

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* AnimalWrongsGroup: Woggle is a one-man example.
* BedlamHouse: Subverted in ''Dead Famous'' when a contestant on a reality TV show pretends to have been abused in a mental institution, in order to boost her appeal with the public. The producer knows this is a lie because both of her own parents were institutionalized, and decides not to broadcast the footage.
* BrainlessBeauty: Kelly is a somewhat sympathetic version, although [[spoiler:she ends up murdered.]]
* ButchLesbian: Played with. Sally, although outwardly the textbook example of this trope, is one of the most sympathetic characters in the book. Also inverted with Trish, who is in the closet and resents people assuming she is heterosexual simply because she's not butch.
* CampingACrapper: [[spoiler:The whole plot of turns out to be based around this. Geraldine realised that at least one of the girls would have to go to the bathroom and planned for the murder to take place there.]]
* CheatersNeverProsper: There's public outrage when Dervla is found to have been cheating by secretly communicating with a cameraman; this results in her ultimately not winning (despite previously being the most popular contestant) because people refuse to vote for her. It's also mentioned that something similar happened in a previous series of the show when a contestant found to be tampering with microphones was disqualified. All of this is presented as rather hypocritical given the manipulative tactics used by the housemates and production team alike.
* DrivenToSuicide: [[spoiler:Sally]] attempts suicide on-camera when [[spoiler:she]] becomes a prime suspect in the murder. [[spoiler:She survives.]]
* EvenTheGirlsWantHer: Seems to be the case for Dervla in ''Dead Famous'', as even [[ButchLesbian Sally]] says she'd like her to be her date at Pride.
* {{Expy}}: Almost all the housemates are blatant imitations of notable contestants from the first two series of ''Big Brother''.
* GranolaGirl: Layla in ''Dead Famous''.
* HoldingTheFloor: In ''Dead Famous'', Inspector Coleridge talks on television for five and a half minutes to delay the end of the show so his colleagues can arrive with [[spoiler: faked]] evidence to prompt a confession from the murderer.
* {{Ladette}}: Kelly and Moon in ''Dead Famous'' fit the trope, with Geraldine referring to Kelly as "the little ladette slapper."

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