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* In ''Film/DownPeriscope'', Rear Admiral Graham tries to torpedo Lieutenant Commander Dodge's career by assigning him [[RagtagBunchOfMisfits the most screwed-up crew]] he can find for the USS ''Stingray'' (an old WWII diesel submarine) hoping they would fail the naval exercise Dodge was participating in as a hypothetical rogue sub commander seeking to harm the US. As with most ragtag bunches of misfits, each member proves to be supremely skilled at their job when handled correctly, allowing Dodge to surpass all expectations and succeed.

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* In ''Film/DownPeriscope'', Rear Admiral Graham tries to torpedo Lieutenant Commander Dodge's career by assigning him [[RagtagBunchOfMisfits the most screwed-up crew]] he can find for the USS ''Stingray'' (an old WWII diesel submarine) hoping they would fail the naval exercise Dodge was participating in as a hypothetical rogue sub commander seeking to harm the US. As with most ragtag bunches of misfits, each member proves to be supremely skilled at their job when handled correctly, allowing Dodge to surpass all expectations and succeed. Bonus points for exploiting the specifics of the old rusty bucket submarine itself to confuse the "enemy" in a way that wouldn't be possible in the slightest with a modern nuclear submarine.
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** In ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsOriginalGeneration'', Kyosuke Nanbu is reassigned to North America's Langley Base after surviving the crash of the Wildraubiter's test flight at the Izu Far East Base. The person who reassigned him, Colonel Hans Weber, [[spoiler:is later revealed to be a [[TheMole Mole]] for the Divine Crusaders and caused the crash.]] After arriving in Langley, Kyosuke is placed on the ATX Team and eventually goes on to defeat the United Colony Corps with his new friends at Langley and aboard the Hiryu Kai. When he returns to Izu, Hans is not pleased at what Kyosuke has become. Later, when [[spoiler:Hans' treachery is revealed, he has to face Kyosuke and if the player feels like it, [[KarmicDeath can be killed by the very same pilot he got rid of to make his plans succeed]].]]
** As per ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundamSEED Gundam SEED]]'''s plot, the casts of both ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsJudgment'' and ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsW'' (well, part of the cast in ''Judgment''; the Alaska bit is one route split choice) get reassigned to the Joshua Base in Alaska by TheFederation, [[spoiler:hoping to get rid of them in an elaborate trap set to weaken ZAFT's military using the [[NukeEm Cyclops System]] since the heroes are doing too well.]] Like in ''Gundam SEED'', [[spoiler:Mu La Flaga (another case of this trope) discovers the Cyclops System and warns everyone to get the Hell out of Dodge.]] The heroes eventually get back at TheFederation in a big way, particularly in W, where [[spoiler:one division of Neue Warter (the heroes) intercepts TheFederation's fleet on its way to crush ZAFT using nuclear weapons to overpower them. And then they proceed to ''utterly destroy'' TheFederation's forces and kill the commander who left them to die in Alaska, [[Anime/TekkamanBlade General Colbert]]]].

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** In ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsOriginalGeneration'', Kyosuke Nanbu is reassigned to North America's Langley Base after surviving the crash of the Wildraubiter's test flight at the Izu Far East Base. The person who reassigned him, Colonel Hans Weber, [[spoiler:is later revealed to be a [[TheMole Mole]] for the Divine Crusaders and caused the crash.]] crash]]. After arriving in Langley, Kyosuke is placed on the ATX Team and eventually goes on to defeat the United Colony Corps with his new friends at Langley and aboard the Hiryu Kai. When he returns to Izu, Hans is not pleased at what Kyosuke has become. Later, when [[spoiler:Hans' treachery is revealed, he has to face Kyosuke and if the player feels like it, [[KarmicDeath can be killed by the very same pilot he got rid of to make his plans succeed]].]]
succeed]]]].
** As per ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundamSEED Gundam SEED]]'''s plot, the casts of both ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsJudgment'' and ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsW'' (well, part of the cast in ''Judgment''; the Alaska bit is one route split choice) get reassigned to the Joshua Base in Alaska by TheFederation, [[spoiler:hoping to get rid of them in an elaborate trap set to weaken ZAFT's military using the [[NukeEm Cyclops System]] since the heroes are doing too well.]] well]]. Like in ''Gundam SEED'', [[spoiler:Mu La Flaga (another case of this trope) discovers the Cyclops System and warns everyone to get the Hell out of Dodge.]] Dodge]]. The heroes eventually get back at TheFederation in a big way, particularly in W, where [[spoiler:one division of Neue Warter (the heroes) intercepts TheFederation's fleet on its way to crush ZAFT using nuclear weapons to overpower them. And then they proceed to ''utterly destroy'' TheFederation's forces and kill the commander who left them to die in Alaska, [[Anime/TekkamanBlade General Colbert]]]].
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* In the play and movie ''TheSolidGoldCadillac'', the {{Corrupt Corporate Executive}}s assign the heroine to be Director of Stockholder Relations at their company because they're tired of hearing her complaints at their board meetings. She soon wins the adoration of all the small shareholders like her, and this ultimately leads to the villains' undoing.

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* In the play and movie ''TheSolidGoldCadillac'', ''Theatre/TheSolidGoldCadillac'', the {{Corrupt Corporate Executive}}s assign the heroine to be Director of Stockholder Relations at their company because they're tired of hearing her complaints at their board meetings. She soon wins the adoration of all the small shareholders like her, and this ultimately leads to the villains' undoing.

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In Science Fiction a variation of this trope can occur when the Alien Hero is assigned to our InsignificantLittleBluePlanet to get him out of the way--only to have a major adventure that impacts the whole universe [[EarthIsTheCenterOfTheUniverse take place on Earth]].

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In Science Fiction ScienceFiction, a variation of this trope can occur when the Alien Hero alien hero is assigned to our InsignificantLittleBluePlanet to get him out of the way--only way -- only to have a major adventure that impacts the whole universe [[EarthIsTheCenterOfTheUniverse take place on Earth]].



* Mihoshi from ''Anime/TenchiMuyo'', who seemingly only '''has''' a job in the Galaxy Police because [[{{Nepotism}} her grandfather is the Grand Marshall]], gets assigned to patrol Earth's solar system. After all, a planet that barely even has space travel could hardly have any trouble for her to get into, and there'd be nothing to report so her superiors wouldn't have to deal with her anymore. Naturally, she promptly gets involved in taking down the most notorious criminal in the universe.
** Kiyone, her partner, doesn't enjoy it in the least, mainly because being partnered with Mihoshi destroyed her career.
** [[{{Expy}} Noike]] in the [=OAVs=] on the other hand, gets assigned there when the GP brass realized that with two Imperial princesses, an Imperial prince, a former S-class criminal (statue of limitations expired), a former Most Wanted Battleship, the Galaxy's greatest MadScientist, a prospective heir to the throne, and their ''Goddess'' (and her sister) taking up residence there (there is some overlap), said planet that barely even has space travel just happens to now have the single highest concentration of political, supernatural, and military power in the universe.
* In ''Manga/FullmetalAlchemist'':
** They promote [[FourStarBadass Olivier Mira Armstrong]] to Central to keep an eye on her and separate her from her loyal troops. However, she knows more than they realize, and takes advantage of her reassignment to quietly learn even more, while also secretly setting into motion a plan to foil the government conspiracy she's uncovered.

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* Mihoshi from ''Anime/TenchiMuyo'', who seemingly only '''has''' a job in This seem to be the Galaxy Police because [[{{Nepotism}} her grandfather is fate of the Grand Marshall]], gets assigned Class E students in ''Manga/AssassinationClassroom''. Originally transferred there to patrol Earth's solar system. After all, a planet that barely even has space travel could hardly have any trouble for her to get into, become the laughingstock of the school and there'd be nothing set an example to report so her superiors wouldn't have to deal with her anymore. Naturally, she promptly gets involved in taking down the most notorious criminal in the universe.
** Kiyone, her partner, doesn't enjoy it in the least, mainly because being partnered with Mihoshi destroyed her career.
** [[{{Expy}} Noike]] in the [=OAVs=] on
the other hand, gets students, their situation takes a turn for the better when they are assigned there when the GP brass realized that with two Imperial princesses, task of killing an Imperial prince, a former S-class criminal (statue of limitations expired), a former Most Wanted Battleship, the Galaxy's greatest MadScientist, a prospective heir to the throne, and almighty alien who properly teaches them in all regular subjects (including assassination skills). Together, they eventually become far more skilled than their ''Goddess'' (and her sister) taking up residence there (there is some overlap), said planet that barely even has space travel just happens to now have the single highest concentration of political, supernatural, "elite" schoolmates and military power a 10-billion-yen bonus shall be given to whoever manages to kill him. However, they must do it in the universe.
one year, or Earth is doomed.
* In ''Manga/FullmetalAlchemist'':
** They promote [[FourStarBadass Olivier Mira Armstrong]] is promoted to Central to keep an eye on her and separate her from her loyal troops. However, she knows more than they realize, and takes advantage of her reassignment to quietly learn even more, while also secretly setting into motion a plan to foil the government conspiracy she's uncovered.



* In ''Manga/DragonBall'', the Saiyans, who travel to other planets to conquer them, send their infants to planets whose inhabitants are so weak sending an adult Saiyan would be overkill. Goku is one such infant, and after landing on Earth he made a head trauma-induced HeelFaceTurn (or landing and being raised by Son Gohan, according to ''Dragon Ball Minus''), became the planet's protector, and fended off the other remaining Saiyans as an adult. And discovered that HalfHumanHybrids are stronger than pure-blooded Saiyans, in theory.
* In ''Anime/MobileSuitGundamWing'', [[spoiler:[[RebelliousPrincess Relena Peacecraft]] was made [[TheHighQueen Queen of the World]] by Duke Dermail in order to improve Romefeller's image and to get her out of the way with a meaningless figurehead title. However, her idealism and charisma cause Romefeller to support her over Dermail, turning her figurehead position into one of actual authority, resulting in Dermail losing almost all of Romefeller's support and indirectly causing his death.]]
** Also doubles as NiceJobFixingItVillain since [[spoiler:Dermail was trying to perpetuate WarForFunAndProfit, [[OneWorldOrder uniting most of the planet under Romefeller]]; Relena's nation is one of the last resisters. Her actions in making Romefeller benevolent end up resulting in TheFederation we see in ''Endless Waltz''.]]

to:

* In ''Manga/DragonBall'', ''Franchise/DragonBall'', the Saiyans, who travel to other planets to conquer them, send their infants to planets whose inhabitants are so weak sending an adult Saiyan would be overkill. Goku is one such infant, and after landing on Earth he made a head trauma-induced HeelFaceTurn (or landing and being raised by Son Gohan, according to ''Dragon Ball Minus''), became the planet's protector, and fended off the other remaining Saiyans as an adult. And adult -- and discovered that HalfHumanHybrids {{Half Human Hybrid}}s are stronger than pure-blooded Saiyans, in theory.
* ''Franchise/{{Gundam}}'':
**
In ''Anime/MobileSuitGundamWing'', [[spoiler:[[RebelliousPrincess Relena Peacecraft]] was made [[TheHighQueen Queen of the World]] by Duke Dermail in order to improve Romefeller's image and to get her out of the way with a meaningless figurehead title. However, her idealism and charisma cause Romefeller to support her over Dermail, turning her figurehead position into one of actual authority, resulting in Dermail losing almost all of Romefeller's support and indirectly causing his death.]]
**
death]]. Also doubles as NiceJobFixingItVillain NiceJobFixingItVillain, since [[spoiler:Dermail was trying to perpetuate WarForFunAndProfit, [[OneWorldOrder uniting most of the planet under Romefeller]]; Relena's nation is one of the last resisters. Her actions in making Romefeller benevolent end up resulting in TheFederation we see in ''Endless Waltz''.]]''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundamWingEndlessWaltz Endless Waltz]]'']].
** ''Anime/MobileSuitGundamSEED'' inverts this slightly. When the ''Archangel'' arrives in JOSH-A, the Earth Alliance brass reassign three crew members -- Mu La Flaga, Flay Allster, and Natarle Badgiruel -- to other sections as they feel they have greater purposes for the war and leave the rest of the Archangel crew at JOSH-A. However, Mu has a suspicion that something's wrong and discovers that it's a trap -- the brass know that ZAFT is setting up to attack and have armed a Cyclops System to wipe them all out and the ''Archangel'' is the bait as they believe that, because of Kira Yamato's time on the ship, it's "tainted" by his Coordinator presence and thus the ''Archangel'' can die with the rest of them. Mu stays with the ''Archangel'', Flay is kidnapped by Rau Le Creuset and Natarle is the only whose reassignment sticks. Oh, and those on the ''Archangel'' become a real pain in ''everyone's'' sides.



* Pretty much Episode 19's plot of ''Anime/MartianSuccessorNadesico''. The higher ups got tired of Yurika and attempted to shunt her out by hijacking a contest originally made to raise morale (and was already hijacked by Yurika by changing the prize to be captain for a day). Their plan backfired when the winner forfeited out of embarrassment and Yurika got it back by virtue of being second place.
** Ironically, the winner ''would'' become captain during TheMovie.
* This seem to be the fate of the Class E students in ''Manga/AssassinationClassroom''. Originally transferred there to become the laughing stock of the school and set an example to the other students, their situation takes a turn for the better when they are assigned the task of killing an almighty alien who properly teaches them in all regular subjects (including assassination skills). Together, they eventually become far more skilled than their "elite" schoolmates and a 10 billion yen bonus shall be given to whoever manages to kill him. However, they must do it in one year, or Earth is doomed.
* ''Anime/MobileSuitGundamSEED'' inverts this slightly -- when the ''Archangel'' arrives in [=JOSH-A=], the Earth Alliance brass reassign three crew members -- Mu La Flaga, Flay Allster, and Natarle Badgiruel -- to other sections as they feel they have greater purposes for the war and leave the rest of the Archangel crew at [=JOSH-A=]. However, Mu has a suspicion that something's wrong and discovers that it's a trap - the brass know [=ZAFT=] is setting up to attack and have armed a Cyclops System to wipe them all out and the ''Archangel'' is the bait as they believe that, because of Kira Yamato's time on the ship, it's "tainted" by his Coordinator presence and thus the ''Archangel'' can die with the rest of them. Mu stays with the ''Archangel'', Flay is kidnapped by Rau Le Creuset and Natarle is the only whose reassignment sticks. Oh, and those on the ''Archangel'' become a real pain in ''everyone's'' sides.
* In ''Manga/SpyXFamily'', Henry Henderson was demoted after punching [[FatBastard Murdoch Swann]] for insulting and mocking Anya Forger to the point of tears, with Henry even realizing that he had become a little too hard about things lately. He seems to take his demotion and being in charge of the first-graders of Cecile Hall in stride, considering it an opportunity for him to rediscover and reignite his passion for teaching.

to:

* Pretty much Episode 19's the plot of ''Anime/MartianSuccessorNadesico''.''Anime/MartianSuccessorNadesico'' episode 19. The higher ups got tired of Yurika and attempted to shunt her out by hijacking a contest originally made to raise morale (and was already hijacked by Yurika by changing the prize to be captain for a day). Their plan backfired when the winner forfeited out of embarrassment and Yurika got it back by virtue of being second place.
**
place. Ironically, the winner ''would'' become captain during TheMovie.
* This seem to be the fate of the Class E students in ''Manga/AssassinationClassroom''. Originally transferred there to become the laughing stock of the school and set an example to the other students, their situation takes a turn for the better when they are assigned the task of killing an almighty alien who properly teaches them in all regular subjects (including assassination skills). Together, they eventually become far more skilled than their "elite" schoolmates and a 10 billion yen bonus shall be given to whoever manages to kill him. However, they must do it in one year, or Earth is doomed.
* ''Anime/MobileSuitGundamSEED'' inverts this slightly -- when the ''Archangel'' arrives in [=JOSH-A=], the Earth Alliance brass reassign three crew members -- Mu La Flaga, Flay Allster, and Natarle Badgiruel -- to other sections as they feel they have greater purposes for the war and leave the rest of the Archangel crew at [=JOSH-A=]. However, Mu has a suspicion that something's wrong and discovers that it's a trap - the brass know [=ZAFT=] is setting up to attack and have armed a Cyclops System to wipe them all out and the ''Archangel'' is the bait as they believe that, because of Kira Yamato's time on the ship, it's "tainted" by his Coordinator presence and thus the ''Archangel'' can die with the rest of them. Mu stays with the ''Archangel'', Flay is kidnapped by Rau Le Creuset and Natarle is the only whose reassignment sticks. Oh, and those on the ''Archangel'' become a real pain in ''everyone's'' sides.
*
In ''Manga/SpyXFamily'', ''Manga/SPYxFAMILY'', Henry Henderson was demoted after punching [[FatBastard Murdoch Swann]] for insulting and mocking Anya Forger to the point of tears, with Henry even realizing that he had become a little too hard about things lately. He seems to take his demotion and being in charge of the first-graders of Cecile Hall in stride, considering it an opportunity for him to rediscover and reignite his passion for teaching.teaching.
* ''Anime/TenchiMuyo'':
** Mihoshi seemingly only '''has''' a job in the Galaxy Police because [[{{Nepotism}} her grandfather is the Grand Marshall]], gets assigned to patrol Earth's solar system. After all, a planet that barely even has space travel could hardly have any trouble for her to get into, and there'd be nothing to report so her superiors wouldn't have to deal with her anymore. Naturally, she promptly gets involved in taking down the most notorious criminal in the universe. Kiyone, her partner, doesn't enjoy it in the least, mainly because being partnered with Mihoshi destroyed her career.
** [[{{Expy}} Noike]] in the [=OAVs=], on the other hand, gets assigned there when the GP brass realized that with two Imperial princesses, an Imperial prince, a former S-class criminal (statue of limitations expired), a former Most Wanted Battleship, the Galaxy's greatest MadScientist, a prospective heir to the throne, and their ''Goddess'' (and her sister) taking up residence there (there is some overlap), said planet that barely even has space travel just happens to now have the single highest concentration of political, supernatural, and military power in the universe.



* A variation occurs in ''ComicBook/BuffyTheVampireSlayer Season Eight''. Rona thought that transferring Simone from Chicago to Rome would soften her up (though Buffy herself thought she did it simply because she didn't want to put up with Simone anymore). Instead, Andrew annoyed her so much that she ended up going rogue, becoming one of Buffy's greatest enemies.



* ''ComicStrip/KnightsOfTheDinnerTable'': When Hard 8 reinstates Nitro's GM credentials, it is with the provision that he is only allowed to GM the Pee Wee Hackleague. Nitro proceeds to take his Pee Wee team all the way to the Garycon finals.
* A variation occurs in ''ComicBook/BuffyTheVampireSlayer Season Eight''. Rona thought that transferring Simone from Chicago to Rome would soften her up (though Buffy herself thought she did it simply because she didn't want to put up with Simone anymore). Instead, Andrew annoyed her so much that she ended up going rogue, becoming one of Buffy's greatest enemies.



[[folder:Comic Strips]]
* ''ComicStrip/KnightsOfTheDinnerTable'': When Hard 8 reinstates Nitro's GM credentials, it is with the provision that he is only allowed to GM the Pee Wee Hackleague. Nitro proceeds to take his Pee Wee team all the way to the Garycon finals.
[[/folder]]



* In the ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' of Creator/AAPessimal, the nineteen-year-old Johanna Smith-Rhodes is first encountered as a conscript Army soldier who led an unsanctioned raid into a hostile neighbouring country, with the stated intention of killing a warlord who raided into her country. Succeeding in this and becoming something of a heroine, she is posted, effectively, as a Marine, part of an armed escort aboard a ship with a valuable cargo. What she doesn't realise until she gets there is that hers is a one-way ticket -- she has effectively been exiled to faraway Ankh-Morpork. Where the Guild of Assassins has been persuaded to offer her a choice: join us as a mature entrant or die trying. She learns later that her country does not want people who very nearly start an all-out war with a powerful neighbour, and considered exile would resolve a problem. Johanna begins a career as an Assassin and gets to be rather good at it. She also grows up and likes it in Ankh-Morpork. Her home country uncomfortably realises they didn't solve a problem. They simply moved it several thousand miles away ''and'' gave it a lot of in-depth skills training. Which proves useful both to the Guild ''and'' to Lord Vetinari.
** Elsewhere, Alison Grose is one of the first women to graduate from the Fools' Guild. Forced by the machinations of Lord Vetinari to take a complement of female students, the Guild is at a loss as to what to do with them after they graduate. It is at pains to point out that while they have been forced by circumstances to ''liberalise'', they are not ''that'' liberal. Alison, aware she is not especially wanted in Ankh-Morpork, gladly accepts an offer from King Verence of Lancre to become his CourtJester. Verence, a much-respected Guild graduate and a King, believes a female jester can't be any worse and may indeed be refreshingly different. The Fools' Guild therefore has to accept that like it or not, there is now a fully accredited Lady Jester out there. Alison thus takes full advantage of exile to a remote backwater Kingdom, one where the Guild cannot easily track or monitor what she is doing, to begin to develop the skills of Clown, Jester and Troubador in excitingly new and novel ways.
* In the first entry of the ''Fanfic/TalesOfTheUndiscoveredSwords'', when [[spoiler: [[RoyalBrat Himetsuru]] is sent on a UriahGambit for being an annoying dickbag, he not only survives the battle but also ''[[OneManArmy singlehandedly]]'' cuts down all the enemies and defends his friends. While having sustained ''critical damage'', no less.]]

to:

* In the ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'' of Creator/AAPessimal, the Creator/AAPessimal:
** The
nineteen-year-old Johanna Smith-Rhodes is first encountered as a conscript Army soldier who led an unsanctioned raid into a hostile neighbouring country, with the stated intention of killing a warlord who raided into her country. Succeeding in this and becoming something of a heroine, she is posted, effectively, as a Marine, part of an armed escort aboard a ship with a valuable cargo. What she doesn't realise until she gets there is that hers is a one-way ticket -- she has effectively been exiled to faraway Ankh-Morpork. Where the Guild of Assassins has been persuaded to offer her a choice: join us as a mature entrant or die trying. She learns later that her country does not want people who very nearly start an all-out war with a powerful neighbour, and considered exile would resolve a problem. Johanna begins a career as an Assassin and gets to be rather good at it. She also grows up and likes it in Ankh-Morpork. Her home country uncomfortably realises they didn't solve a problem. They simply moved it several thousand miles away ''and'' gave it a lot of in-depth skills training. Which proves useful both to the Guild ''and'' to Lord Vetinari.
** Elsewhere, Alison Grose is one of the first women to graduate from the Fools' Guild. Forced by the machinations of Lord Vetinari to take a complement of female students, the Guild is at a loss as to what to do with them after they graduate. It is at pains to point out that while they have been forced by circumstances to ''liberalise'', they are not ''that'' liberal. Alison, aware she is not especially wanted in Ankh-Morpork, gladly accepts an offer from King Verence of Lancre to become his CourtJester. Verence, a much-respected Guild graduate and a King, believes a female jester can't be any worse and may indeed be refreshingly different. The Fools' Guild therefore has to accept that like it or not, there is now a fully accredited Lady Jester out there. Alison thus takes full advantage of exile to a remote backwater Kingdom, one where the Guild cannot easily track or monitor what she is doing, to begin to develop the skills of Clown, Jester and Troubador in excitingly new and novel ways.
ways.
* ''WebVideo/ScootertrixTheAbridged'': General Apple Bloom [[AlwaysSomeoneBetter resents General Flash Sentry for succeeding at everything]]. When Bloom draws up her strategy for Equestria to wage a war on two fronts, she isn't the one who decides to send Sentry and his forces to the borders of the Changeling Empire -- far away from the Crystal Empire, where the real fighting is supposed to happen -- but all the same, she's openly glad that that Sentry won't be able to steal any of her glory this time. Then Apple Bloom's grand strategy falls apart within a week, while Flash Sentry's victories against the changelings wind up being the only good news from that same period.
* In the first entry of the ''Fanfic/TalesOfTheUndiscoveredSwords'', when [[spoiler: [[RoyalBrat [[spoiler:[[RoyalBrat Himetsuru]] is sent on a UriahGambit for being an annoying dickbag, he not only survives the battle but also ''[[OneManArmy singlehandedly]]'' cuts down all the enemies and defends his friends. While having sustained ''critical damage'', no less.]]less]].



** The Fay 20th, recently rebuilt after being brutally mauled in a fight against Orks, was sent to an out-of-the-way post in that planet when the Orks arrived to Fay, keeping them as possible bait while the more glamorous "Grand Army" did the job of killing the Orks. In the end, the Grand Army is destroyed to the last man and the Fay 20th -- after the miraculous appearance of Taylor Hebert -- becomes the unit that breaks the back of the Ork army.

to:

** The Fay 20th, recently rebuilt after being brutally mauled in a fight against Orks, was sent to an out-of-the-way post in that planet when the Orks arrived to at Fay, keeping them as possible bait while the more glamorous "Grand Army" did the job of killing the Orks. In the end, the Grand Army is destroyed to the last man and the Fay 20th -- after the miraculous appearance of Taylor Hebert -- becomes the unit that breaks the back of the Ork army.



** The Fabricator of Quayrian assigns Archmagos Thayer Sagami, one of his political rivals, to command the ''[[CoolStarship HMHMS Enterprise]]'', clearly expecting to get him out of the way for a decade and potentially killed. Six years later, and he is in command of the flagship of the fleet assigned to Operation Caribbean, which ends up destroying the Pavia system's pirate haven [[spoiler: and razes Commorragh]] and retrieves large amounts of incredibly valuable materials and priceless archeotech, including two of the ''Artifacts of Vulkan''.

to:

** The Fabricator of Quayrian assigns Archmagos Thayer Sagami, one of his political rivals, to command the ''[[CoolStarship HMHMS Enterprise]]'', clearly expecting to get him out of the way for a decade and potentially killed. Six years later, and he is in command of the flagship of the fleet assigned to Operation Caribbean, which ends up destroying the Pavia system's pirate haven [[spoiler: haven, [[spoiler:razing Commorragh]], and razes Commorragh]] and retrieves retrieving large amounts of incredibly valuable materials and priceless archeotech, including two of the ''Artifacts of Vulkan''.



* In ''WesternAnimation/{{Ratatouille}}'', the jealous Head Chef Skinner learns that a finicky group of customers at Gusteau's are requesting a new dish and are so used to the founder's cooking that choosing a less used recipe will not be accepted. In an attempt to discredit the new chef, Linguini (who, unknown to Skinner, is simply a front for Remy the rat, who is a brilliant cook), he orders him to prepare an off menu dish using an obscure recipe that even Auguste Gusteau wrote off as horrible. However, Remy is able to modify the recipe dramatically and make the dish a scrumptious success that runs the kitchen staff ragged supplying all the patrons who now want to try it. To Skinner's shock, this busy night removes all doubts in the kitchen staff that Linguini is a master chef.

to:

* In ''WesternAnimation/{{Ratatouille}}'', the jealous Head Chef Skinner learns that a finicky group of customers at Gusteau's are requesting a new dish and are so used to the founder's cooking that choosing a less used recipe will not be accepted. In an attempt to discredit the new chef, Linguini (who, unknown to Skinner, is simply a front for Remy the rat, who is a brilliant cook), he orders him to prepare an off menu off-menu dish using an obscure recipe that even Auguste Gusteau wrote off as horrible. However, Remy is able to modify the recipe dramatically and make the dish a scrumptious success that runs the kitchen staff ragged supplying all the patrons who now want to try it. To Skinner's shock, this busy night removes all doubts in the kitchen staff that Linguini is a master chef.



* ''Film/AdvanceToTheRear'': General Willoughby is terrified to realize that sending Brackenbury and the other misfits out into the middle of nowhere right before a major gold shipment passes through the area is about to have them screw up worse than he can afford. This doesn't happen but they do end up getting the credit for an impressive coup when they foil the robbery.
* In ''Film/BatmanBegins'', Lucius Fox is assigned as head of the Applied Sciences division of Wayne Enterprises because Earle wants him out of the board and in a place where he won't have any influence over the company. However, when Bruce Wayne returns from his training with the League of Shadows, Fox's military prototypes catch his attention. After Bruce entrusts Fox with supplying him all the gear he needs in order to be Batman, Earle fires Fox for asking too many questions about a certain microwave emitter that [[spoiler:was seized by the League of Shadows]]. At the end of the movie, Bruce has returned to being the head of Wayne Enterprises by buying back all of his company's shares, and also gives Fox a better job: Earle's. [[IronicEcho "Didn't you get the memo?"]]
* A rare villainous example appears in ''Film/BattlefieldEarth''. [[BigBad Terl]] has been reassigned to Earth and condemned there indefinitely as petty revenge for getting involved with the daughter of a senator, which leads to [[spoiler:the destruction of the Psychlo race]].
* Another villainous example occurs in ''Film/CaptainAmericaTheFirstAvenger''. Johann Schmidt is reassigned by Hitler to a base in the Swiss Alps after being disfigured. This gives him privacy enough to make his own army behind Hitler's back.
* Played with in ''Film/DancesWithWolves'': TheHero ''chooses'' his reassignment to the Dakotas, out in the middle of nowhere. He then actually does end up sinking his own career when his superiors learn that he's been making friends with the natives.
* In ''Film/DownPeriscope'', Rear Admiral Graham tries to torpedo Lieutenant Commander Dodge's career by assigning him [[RagtagBunchOfMisfits the most screwed-up crew]] he can find for the USS ''Stingray'' (an old WWII diesel submarine) hoping they would fail the naval exercise Dodge was participating in as a hypothetical rogue sub commander seeking to harm the US. As with most ragtag bunches of misfits, each member proves to be supremely skilled at their job when handled correctly, allowing Dodge to surpass all expectations and succeed.
* Kazuhiro in ''Film/GungHo'' was put in charge of Assan Motors' fledgling US assembly plant, in order to fail because his bosses felt he thought too much like an American. Didn't quite think that one through.



* Kazuhiro in ''Film/GungHo'' was put in charge of Assan Motors' fledgling US assembly plant, in order to fail because his bosses felt he thought too much like an American. Didn't quite think that one through.

to:

* Kazuhiro ''Film/{{Interceptor}}'': Captain J.J. Collins accuses her superior at the Pentagon of sexual harassment, so becomes the subject of a hate campaign by her colleagues and gets reassigned to SBX-1, a weaponized sea platform in ''Film/GungHo'' was put the middle of the ocean. Then terrorists attack the platform to knock out its interceptor missiles so they can launch nukes at the United States, and she becomes a national heroine for foiling their EvilPlan.
* In the Creator/AbbottAndCostello film ''Little Giant'', Benny Miller is transferred to a remote sales district following a disastrous first day as a TravelingSalesman. However, due
in charge of Assan Motors' fledgling US assembly plant, in order a large part to fail because a prank played on him by his bosses felt coworkers, he thought too much like an American. Didn't quite think ends up becoming the company's Salesman of the Year.
* In ''Morgan Pålsson: World Reporter'', the titular reporter is thrown away to a back-water middle-eastern country so they won't risk having to broadcast his reports. Then a coup d'état happens in
that one through.country. Unlike other examples, the coup only further highlights his incompetence.



* In ''Morgan Pålsson: World Reporter'' the titular reporter is thrown away to a back-water middle-eastern country so they won't risk having to broadcast his reports. Then a coup d'état happens in that country. Unlike other examples, the coup only further highlights his incompetence.
* In ''Film/SpiesLikeUs'', Emmett Fitz-Hume (who only got his job through nepotism), and Austin Millbarge (who works in the bowels of a civil service building) have this happen to them. Emmett didn't study for the upcoming civil service exam, and while Austin initially refuses to help him cheat, both end up causing a scene in the exam room. So their superiors send them to Pakistan as decoys, claiming they would be on a mission of great importance (when in reality, they were just there to keep the fire off the real agents). Except they eventually find their way to Russia, where alongside one of the REAL CIA agents, they end up saving the day.
* In ''Film/DownPeriscope'', Rear Admiral Graham tries to torpedo Lieutenant Commander Dodge's career by assigning him [[RagtagBunchOfMisfits the most screwed-up crew]] he can find for the USS ''Stingray'' (an old [=WW2=] diesel submarine) hoping they would fail the naval exercise Dodge was participating in as a hypothetical rogue sub commander seeking to harm the US. As with most ragtag bunches of misfits, each member proves to be supremely skilled at their job when handled correctly, allowing Dodge to surpass all expectations and succeed.
* Played with in ''Film/DancesWithWolves'', where TheHero ''chooses'' his reassignment to the Dakotas, out in the middle of nowhere. He then actually does end up sinking his own career when his superiors learn that he's been making friends with the natives.
* In ''Film/BatmanBegins'', Lucius Fox is assigned as head of the Applied Sciences division of Wayne Enterprises because Earle wants him out of the board and in a place where he won't have any influence over the company. However, when Bruce Wayne returns from his training with the League of Shadows, Fox's military prototypes catch his attention. After Bruce entrusts Fox with supplying him all the gear he needs in order to be Batman, Earle fires Fox for asking too many questions about a certain microwave emitter that [[spoiler:was seized by the League of Shadows]]. At the end of the movie, Bruce has returned to being the head of Wayne Enterprises by buying back all of his company's shares, and also gives Fox a better job: Earle's. [[IronicEcho "Didn't you get the memo?"]]
* ''Film/UnderSiege'' Chief Casey Ryback (Creator/StevenSeagal) is a Navy SEAL [[ArtisticLicenseMilitary reassigned as a cook for striking one of his superior officers]]. This proves invaluable when terrorists take control of his ship, as he's in the kitchen, away from them when they take the crew hostage.
* A rare villainous example appears in ''Film/CaptainAmericaTheFirstAvenger''. Johann Schmidt is reassigned by Hitler to a base in the Swiss Alps after being disfigured. This gives him privacy enough to make his own army behind Hitler's back.
* Also another villainous example occurs in ''Film/BattlefieldEarth''. [[BigBad Terl]] has been reassigned to Earth and condemned there indefinitely as petty revenge for getting involved with the daughter of a senator, which leads to [[spoiler:the destruction of the Psychlo race]].
* In ''Film/StarTrek2009'', [[TheEngineer Scotty]] was [[ReassignedToAntarctica reassigned to Delta Vega]], thus putting him in position to help [[TheHero Kirk]] save the day.

to:

* In ''Morgan Pålsson: World Reporter'' the titular reporter This is thrown away to a back-water middle-eastern country so they won't risk having to broadcast his reports. Then a coup d'état happens in that country. Unlike other examples, the coup only further highlights his incompetence.
* In ''Film/SpiesLikeUs'', Emmett Fitz-Hume (who only got his job through nepotism), and Austin Millbarge (who works in the bowels
bit of a civil service building) have this happen RunningGag throughout ''Franchise/ThePinkPanther'' films. Chief Inspector Dreyfuss will, due to them. Emmett didn't study for the upcoming civil service exam, and while Austin initially refuses to help him cheat, both end up causing a scene in the exam room. So their superiors send them to Pakistan as decoys, claiming they would be on a mission of great importance (when in reality, they were just there to keep the fire off the real agents). Except they eventually find their way to Russia, where alongside one of the REAL CIA agents, they end up saving the day.
* In ''Film/DownPeriscope'', Rear Admiral Graham tries to torpedo Lieutenant Commander Dodge's career by assigning him [[RagtagBunchOfMisfits the most screwed-up crew]] he can find for the USS ''Stingray'' (an old [=WW2=] diesel submarine) hoping they would fail the naval exercise Dodge was participating in as a hypothetical rogue sub commander seeking to harm the US. As with most ragtag bunches of misfits, each member proves to be supremely skilled at their job when handled correctly, allowing Dodge to surpass all expectations
personal dislike and succeed.
* Played with in ''Film/DancesWithWolves'', where TheHero ''chooses'' his reassignment to the Dakotas, out in the middle of nowhere. He then actually does end up sinking his own career when his superiors learn that he's been making friends with the natives.
* In ''Film/BatmanBegins'', Lucius Fox is assigned as head of the Applied Sciences division of Wayne Enterprises because Earle wants him out of the board and in a place where he won't have any influence over the company. However, when Bruce Wayne returns from his training with the League of Shadows, Fox's military prototypes catch his attention. After Bruce entrusts Fox with supplying him all the gear he needs in order to be Batman, Earle fires Fox for asking too many questions about a certain microwave emitter that [[spoiler:was seized by the League of Shadows]]. At the end of the movie, Bruce has returned to being the head of Wayne Enterprises by buying back all
awareness of his company's shares, subordinate's obvious and also gives Fox a better job: Earle's. [[IronicEcho "Didn't you get the memo?"]]
* ''Film/UnderSiege'' Chief Casey Ryback (Creator/StevenSeagal) is a Navy SEAL [[ArtisticLicenseMilitary reassigned as a cook for striking one of his superior officers]]. This proves invaluable when terrorists take control of his ship, as he's in the kitchen, away from them when they take the crew hostage.
* A rare villainous example appears in ''Film/CaptainAmericaTheFirstAvenger''. Johann Schmidt is reassigned by Hitler
dangerous incompetence, try to a base in the Swiss Alps after being disfigured. This gives him privacy enough reassign Inspector Clouseau to make his own army behind Hitler's back.
* Also another villainous example occurs in ''Film/BattlefieldEarth''. [[BigBad Terl]] has been reassigned to Earth and condemned there indefinitely as petty revenge for getting involved with the daughter of a senator, which leads to [[spoiler:the destruction of the Psychlo race]].
* In ''Film/StarTrek2009'', [[TheEngineer Scotty]] was [[ReassignedToAntarctica reassigned to Delta Vega]], thus putting him in
some out-of-the-way position in regards to help [[TheHero Kirk]] save the day.current investigation of the film, only for Clouseau to somehow bumble his way into solving the crime and receiving all the glory.



* In the Creator/AbbottAndCostello film ''Little Giant'', Benny Miller is transferred to a remote sales district following a disastrous first day as a TravelingSalesman. However, due in a large part to a prank played on him by his coworkers, he ends up becoming the company's Salesman of the Year.
* This is a bit of a RunningGag throughout ''Franchise/ThePinkPanther'' films. Chief Inspector Dreyfuss will, due to both personal dislike and awareness of his subordinate's obvious and dangerous incompetence, try to reassign Inspector Clouseau to some out-of-the-way position in regards to the current investigation of the film, only for Clouseau to somehow bumble his way into solving the crime and receiving all the glory.
* ''Film/AdvanceToTheRear'': General Willoughby is terrified to realize that sending Brackenbury and the other misfits out into the middle of nowhere right before a major gold shipment passes through the area is about to have them screw up worse than he can afford. This doesn't happen but they do end up getting the credit for an impressive coup when they foil the robbery.
* ''Film/Interceptor2022''. Captain J.J. Collins accuses her superior at the Pentagon of sexual harassment, so becomes the subject of a hate campaign by her colleagues and gets reassigned to SBX-1, a weaponized sea platform in the middle of the ocean. Then terrorists attack the platform to knock out its interceptor missiles so they can launch nukes at the United States, and she becomes a national heroine for foiling their EvilPlan.

to:

* In the Creator/AbbottAndCostello film ''Little Giant'', Benny Miller is transferred to a remote sales district following a disastrous first day as a TravelingSalesman. However, due in a large part to a prank played on him by his coworkers, he ends up becoming the company's Salesman of the Year.
* This is a bit of a RunningGag throughout ''Franchise/ThePinkPanther'' films. Chief Inspector Dreyfuss will, due to both personal dislike and awareness of his subordinate's obvious and dangerous incompetence, try to reassign Inspector Clouseau to some out-of-the-way position in regards to the current investigation of the film,
''Film/SpiesLikeUs'', Emmett Fitz-Hume (who only for Clouseau to somehow bumble got his way into solving the crime and receiving all the glory.
* ''Film/AdvanceToTheRear'': General Willoughby is terrified to realize that sending Brackenbury and the other misfits out into the middle of nowhere right before a major gold shipment passes
job through nepotism), and Austin Millbarge (who works in the area is about to bowels of a civil service building) have them screw up worse than he can afford. This doesn't this happen but they do to them. Emmett didn't study for the upcoming civil service exam, and while Austin initially refuses to help him cheat, both end up getting causing a scene in the credit for an impressive coup when exam room. Their superiors send them to Pakistan as decoys, claiming they'll be on a mission of great importance (when in reality, they're just there to keep the fire off the real agents)... except they foil eventually find their way to Russia, where they end up saving the robbery.
* ''Film/Interceptor2022''. Captain J.J. Collins accuses her superior at
day alongside one of the Pentagon of sexual harassment, so becomes the subject of a hate campaign by her colleagues and gets ''real'' CIA agents.
* In ''Film/StarTrek2009'', [[TheEngineer Scotty]] was [[ReassignedToAntarctica
reassigned to SBX-1, a weaponized sea platform Delta Vega]], thus putting him in position to help [[TheHero Kirk]] save the middle day.
* ''Film/UnderSiege'': Chief Casey Ryback is a Navy SEAL [[ArtisticLicenseMilitary reassigned as a cook for striking one
of the ocean. Then his superior officers]]. This proves invaluable when terrorists attack take control of his ship, as he's in the platform to knock out its interceptor missiles so kitchen, away from them when they can launch nukes at take the United States, and she becomes a national heroine for foiling their EvilPlan.crew hostage.



* ''Literature/TheMinistryOfPeculiarOccurrences'' Series begins with Field Agent Eliza Braun being reassigned to the archive, which is a boring job, where she can't play with explosives. Of course, she finds an unsolved case in one of the dusty folders and teams up with Agent Books, the one who is in charge of the archive, to solve it.
* The Literature/HonorHarrington series by David Weber does this three times:

to:

* ''Literature/TheMinistryOfPeculiarOccurrences'' Series begins A bit of a variation in ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}'': the disgraced Seerow is stationed on the Hork-Bajir homeworld, which the Andalite superiors believe to not be in any way significant. Then the Yeerks arrive. The variation? Seerow is killed almost immediately; it's his daughter (who was stationed there with Field Agent Eliza Braun being reassigned him) who becomes a heroine due to the archive, reassignment.
* A variant occurs in ''Literature/{{Antares}} Passage''. Captain Drake has nothing against his Sandarian exchange officer, Ensign Philip Walkirk. However, this particular ensign happens to be [[RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething Crown Prince of Sandar]], and Drake is terrified of the possibility that he might get killed while under Drake's command, so he assigns him to command the Marine detachment, figuring that there's little chance they'll see any action. Later, the Marines end up boarding a Ryall transport. Fortunately, Philip survives unscathed.
* In ''Literature/ArtemisFowl: The Arctic Incident'', elf LEP recon captain Holly Short is assigned to guarding an abandoned shuttle port where nothing has happened in literally a hundred years. Naturally, she encounters a huge goblin smuggling program
which involves the use of a human contact and illegal weapons.
* ''Literature/TheDeathOfRussia'': Viktor Aksyuchits, a member of the National Salvation Front who wasn't an extremist (instead being [[TokenGoodTeammate a fairly standard Christian Democrat]]), was [[ReassignedToAntarctica made the regional governor of Primorsky]] in order to get him away far away from any meaningful position in Moscow. As Siberia and the Far East descend into anarchy when the Second Russian Civil War kicks off, he [[spoiler:declares Primorsky's independence as the Far Eastern Republic, and becomes a beloved leader after leading the young nation through a North Korean invasion]].
* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'':
** In ''Literature/ThiefOfTime'', several of the managers of the History Monks assign Lobsang Ludd (a troublesome child) be the apprentice of Lu Tze (widely seen as a great hero, but has lots of fun annoying the other monks), on the basis that either or both will break the other. [[spoiler:Their combined efforts end up saving the world.]]
** Vetinari invokes this ''intentionally'' with Moist von Lipwig in ''Literature/GoingPostal'' by putting the sentenced-to-death criminal to work reforming the Ankh-Mopork postal office, a job that has so far claimed the lives of the last four people who tried in short order, and assigning him an [[ImplacableMan Implacable Parole Officer]]. [[XanatosGambit If he succeeds, the Post Office
is up and running again; if he doesn't, well, the city was prepared to kill him anyway, one way or the other]]. As he later describes it, [[spoiler:it was a boring job, cruel joke that fortunately backfired in the best way possible]].
** The advent of Mustrum Ridcully to Arch-Chancellor was the result of a spectacular error by scheming wizards who wanted an unworldly rural wizard in position to allow them time to scheme and plot, with a deliberately chosen weak nonentity in the figurehead role. What they actually ''got'' was a rumbustious Creator/BrianBlessed of a man, who proved himself unkillable, who grabbed the role by the scruff of the neck and became the longest-serving Arch-Chancellor in history. His brother Hughnon succeeded a weak and doddering High Priest (killed by a dragon) through what the reader suspects is the same mechanism.
* In the ''Literature/DragonridersOfPern'' series, this appeared to be the case with Masterharper Petiron, the old harper of Menolly's repressed, backwater fishing hold. Subverted later in ''Masterharper of Pern'', when we find out that Petiron asked to be sent there, to make a fresh start
where no one knew he was other than "the harper". And he chose this over the protests of his superior, his son Robinton.
* In ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles'', Murphy's position as the head of Special Investigations is where people you really, really don't like are sent and they soon leave, disgusted with it. Murphy's the first person who's stayed long enough to warrant a nameplate. This is due to the fact that before Murphy, every SI head simply refused to acknowledge that anything supernatural was going on. This led to none of their cases ever being closed, and a quick dismissal. Murphy actually decided to start believing in the paranormal and so she actually did get results. In the end, though, even
she can't play avoid all the problems associated with explosives. the position. In ''Literature/WhiteNight'' [[spoiler:she is demoted]], and by the end of ''Literature/{{Changes}}'', [[spoiler:her dereliction of duty results in her being summarily fired]].
* An inversion happens in ''Literature/{{Dune}}'', in which Duke Atreides is sent by TheEmperor from his ancestral home planet to the desert planet Arrakis... which is the only place in the universe that the "spice" that their civilization runs on is made, and is thus actually the ''most'' important planet in the universe and best post possible.
Of course, she finds the reason why the Emperor relocated him there instead of playing the trope straight is that instead of wanting to sink the Duke's career he's [[MagnificentBastard hatching a plot]] to get rid of him directly, which succeeds. [[spoiler:The backfire comes when his son Paul just so happens to be a {{Seer|s}} and becomes a MessianicArchetype who gathers the ProudWarriorRaceGuy natives together and [[TookALevelInBadAss trains]] them to be a BadAssArmy LaResistance, launching a ''coup d'etat''.]]
* In ''The ESP Worm'' by Creator/PiersAnthony, the hero is the President's deadbeat cousin, who was given the supposedly meaningless job of negotiating with any aliens that ever happened to come to Earth. Humans have never come in contact with
an unsolved case in alien before, but there's a first time for everything, and naturally, it comes as a surprise to everyone when the titular worm is the first alien to come to Earth.
* The main character of Creator/LEModesittJr's SpaceOpera novel ''The Ethos Effect'', a former military spaceship commander responsible for a PR disaster (everyone knows he [[IDidWhatIHadToDo did what he had to do]], but being responsible for the loss of a large passenger ship doesn't make you popular) ends up being the "victim" of one of these; he's given a weird assignment that doesn't match his experience, working at an embassy on a planet he's completely unfamiliar with. He ends up foiling an assassination attempt targeting diplomats from multiple interstellar nations, [[spoiler:which angers his superiors even more, because (as the main character eventually realizes) they were ''behind the assassination attempt'' and didn't intend for him to actually succeed at his job. In fact, they didn't even intend for him to [[UriahGambit survive the journey to the planet]]; the unidentified spaceship that attacked him en route was actually [[FalseFlagOperation one of their own ships]]]].
* ''Literature/{{Flashman}}'' is a good example of this. Harry Flashman, freshly expelled from Rugby School, joins the prestigious 11th Hussars. Within a year, he gets into a duel over a woman, and is posted to Glasgow, assisting the local militia against agitating mill workers. He seduces the prettiest daughter of the mill owner he's billeted with, and is forced to marry her. This doesn't sit well with Lord Cardigan, the commander of the 11th Hussars, and he gets posted again, this time to India (a location hated and despised by Cardigan). Flashman's skill with a horse and lance impresses the Governor General, and he's sent as an ADC to Kabul, on General Elphinstone's staff. He gains (stolen) credit with the natives as "Bloody Lance", the lone killer of five would-be assassins, and gains credit with the military and public when he's
one of the dusty folders and teams up with Agent Books, the one who is in charge few survivors of the archive, Kabul Retreat, and "defends" a small fort outside the besieged Jalalabad -- he's found surrounded by dead, clutching the flag to solve it.
his chest. As the only (white) survivor, he feels free to not contradict the CO's assumption that he wasn't cowering uselessly in bed, and was in fact about to throw the flag to the attackers. He gets a hero's send-off from India, a hero's welcome upon his return, and a medal from Queen Victoria herself.
* Galaeron Nihmedu, the protagonist of the ''Literature/ForgottenRealms'' trilogy ''Return of the Archwizards'', Galaeron Nihmedu was assigned to far tomb guard due to wizards-vs.-sorcerers discrimination. Where he met some "grave robbers" who turns out to be something more, accidentally participated in release of SealedEvilInACan planned anyway, and acquired both priceless report from top Netherese spy, as well as means to put it to good use and save his home city.
* In ''Literature/TheFourthProtocol'', [=MI5=] investigator John Preston is reassigned to Ports & Airports after annoying his PointyHairedBoss. This puts him in the position to investigate a Soviet plot to smuggle the components of an atomic bomb into the country. When he tries to get the attention of his boss re this plot, he's put on leave -- this gives him the time to run a RogueAgent operation to track down the agent assembling the bomb.
* The Literature/HonorHarrington ''Literature/HonorHarrington'' series by David Weber does this three times:



* Robert Asprin's ''[[Literature/PhulesCompany Phule]]'' books start off with the main character getting reassigned for strafing a peace-treaty signing; it's intended as a punishment because his new post involves taking charge of the Space Legion's [[RagtagBunchOfMisfits losers]] on a [[ReassignedToAntarctica backwater planet]]. Of course, things go much differently than planned, and this is more-or-less the last time [[TheGoodCaptain Phule]] and [[BadassCrew the Omega Mob]] get transferred/"promoted"/etc [[BadBoss without malicious intentions]].
** Tellingly, the only reason Phule was reassigned at all and not court-martialed was due to the fact that his father owned the largest munitions company in the galaxy. The Legion's top brass was intending Phule to become so fed up with his RagtagBandOfMisfits that he would voluntarily quit, as a bored, rich kid can find other ways to amuse himself.
* In ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles,'' Murphy's position as the head of Special Investigations is where people you really, really don't like get sent and they soon leave, disgusted with it. Murphy's the first person who's stayed long enough to warrant a nameplate.
** This is due to the fact that before Murphy, every SI head simply refused to acknowledge that anything supernatural was going on. This lead to none of their cases ever being closed, and a quick dismissal. Murphy actually decided to start believing in the paranormal and so she actually did get results.
** Though in the end even she can't avoid all the problems associated with the position. In ''Literature/WhiteNight'' [[spoiler:she is demoted]], and by the end of ''Literature/{{Changes}}'' [[spoiler:her dereliction of duty results in her being summarily fired.]]
* In ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}'' novels:
** In Creator/DanAbnett's ''Literature/GauntsGhosts'' novels, Colonel-Commissar Gaunt has been living in reassignment hell for the last 15 years. The fact that such reassignments have backfired time and time again have not stopped the higher-ups whom he has offended to keep trying. The reassignments have been meant to do a little more than get his career stuck, so it's also a case of SurprisinglyEliteCannonFodder since most of Gaunt's men also manage to survive the experience.
** Inverted by a fellow Commissar, Creator/SandyMitchell's Literature/CiaphasCain (HERO OF THE IMPERIUM), who ''wants'' a nice, comfortable out-of-the-way post in order to keep himself out of harm's way. He'll "heroically" volunteer for the most boring posting he can, only to somehow put himself in the most dangerous spot possible. Ironically, his tendency to find himself running up against seemingly impossible odds and [[IndyPloy triumphing by sheer dumb luck]] have earned him the status of a [[FakeUltimateHero Hero of the Imperium]], meaning he's ''expected'' to be at the front lines, facing enemy fire. From his perspective, he's now suffering the trope since he's forced to accept these assignments to keep up his reputation and not disappoint his friends and colleagues. A straight example is his aide, Gunner Jurgen. The malodorous soldier was originally assigned to Cain as a practical joke, but between his skill as a soldier and hidden AntiMagic abilities the arrangement became the foundation of Cain's rise to fame.
* In Creator/LoisMcMasterBujold's ''Literature/VorkosiganSaga'', Miles Vorkosigan is assigned to Kyril Island, an out-of-the-way training base, as the Weather Officer. This is specifically a test to see if he can handle a normal, boring assignment without causing problems, since his ongoing insubordination and need to ''do something'' doesn't fly in a real military posting. Before his tour of duty was up he had joined a mutiny and barely avoided treason charges, the fallout of which got his commanding officer dishonorably discharged. As usual, it's genetic. Aral Vorkosigan had ups and downs like this. He'd do the right thing, but nobody would like it, so he'd get assigned to some punishment post...and come out of it smelling like roses. Most notably, this was part of ThePlan that turned him into the Barrayaran {{Cincinnatus}}.
* In the first ''Literature/ThursdayNext'' book ''The Eyre Affair'', literary detective Next gets transferred to a [=SpecOps=] post in Swindon (which also happens to be her [[QuirkyTown quirky]] hometown). Her colleagues are puzzled at her seeming demotion (when she could have chosen a better post), but Thursday [[WriteBackToTheFuture knows what she's doing]].
* In Creator/LEModesittJr's SpaceOpera novel ''The Ethos Effect'' the main character, a former military spaceship commander responsible for a PR disaster (everyone knows he [[IDidWhatIHadToDo did what he had to do]], but being responsible for the loss of a large passenger ship doesn't make you popular) ends up being the "victim" of one of these; he's given a weird assignment that doesn't match his experience, working at an embassy on a planet he's completely unfamiliar with. He ends up foiling an assassination attempt targeting diplomats from multiple interstellar nations. [[spoiler:Which angers his superiors even more, because, as the main character eventually realizes, they were ''behind the assassination attempt'' and didn't intend for him to actually succeed at his job. In fact, they didn't even intend for him to [[UriahGambit survive the journey to the planet]]; the unidentified spaceship that attacked him en route was actually [[FalseFlagOperation one of their own ships]].]]
* In ''The ESP Worm'' by Creator/PiersAnthony, the hero is the President's deadbeat cousin, who was given the supposedly meaningless job of negotiating with any aliens that ever happened to come to Earth. Humans have never come in contact with an alien before, but there's a first time for everything, and naturally, it comes as a surprise to everyone when the titular worm is the first alien to come to Earth.
* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'':
** In the novel ''Literature/ThiefOfTime'', several of the managers of the History Monks assign Lobsang Ludd (a troublesome child) be the apprentice of Lu Tze (widely seen as a great hero, but has lots of fun annoying the other monks), on the basis that either or both will break the other. [[spoiler:Their combined efforts end up saving the world ...]]
** Vetinari invokes this ''intentionally'' with Moist von Lipwig in ''Literature/GoingPostal'' by putting the sentenced-to-death criminal to work reforming the Ankh-Mopork postal office, a job that has so far claimed the lives of the last four people who tried in short order, and assigning him an [[ImplacableMan Implacable Parole Officer]]. [[XanatosGambit If he succeeds, the Post Office is up and running again. If he doesn't, well, the city was prepared to kill him anyway, one way or the other.]] As he later describes it, [[spoiler:it was a cruel joke that fortunately backfired in the best way possible.]]
** The advent of Mustrum Ridcully to Arch-Chancellor was the result of a spectacular error by scheming wizards who wanted an unworldly rural wizard in position to allow them time to scheme and plot, with a deliberately chosen weak nonentity in the figurehead role. What they actually ''got'' was a runbustious Creator/BrianBlessed of a man, who proved himself unkillable, who grabbed the role by the scruff of the neck and became the longest-serving Arch-Chancellor in history. His brother Hughnon suceeded a weak and doddering High Priest (killed by a dragon) through what the reader suspects is the same mechanism.
* In the second Literature/ArtemisFowl novel ''Artemis Fowl: The Arctic Incident'' elf LEP recon captain Holly Short is assigned to guarding an abandoned shuttle port where nothing has happened in literally a hundred years. Naturally, she encounters a huge goblin smuggling program which involves the use of a human contact and illegal weapons.
* {{Literature/Flashman}} is a good example of this. Harry Flashman, freshly expelled from Rugby School, joins the prestigious 11th Hussars. Within a year, he gets into a duel over a woman, and is posted to Glasgow, assisting the local militia against agitating mill workers. He seduces the prettiest daughter of the mill owner he's billeted with, and is forced to marry her. This doesn't sit well with Lord Cardigan, the commander of the 11th Hussars, and he gets posted again, this time to India (a location hated and despised by Cardigan). Flashman's skill with a horse and lance impresses the Governor General, and he's sent as an ADC to Kabul, on General Elphinstone's staff. He gains (stolen) credit with the natives as "Bloody Lance", the lone killer of five would-be assassins, and gains credit with the military and public when he's one of the few survivors of the Kabul Retreat, and "defends" a small fort outside the besieged Jalalabad -- he's found surrounded by dead, clutching the flag to his chest. As the only (white) survivor, he feels free to not contradict the CO's assumption that he wasn't cowering uselessly in bed, and was in fact about to throw the flag to the attackers. He gets a hero's send-off from India, a hero's welcome upon his return, and a medal from Queen Victoria herself.
* In the ''Literature/DragonridersOfPern'' series, this appeared to be the case with Masterharper Petiron, the old harper of Menolly's repressed, backwater fishing hold. Subverted later in ''Masterharper of Pern'', when we find out that Petiron asked to be sent there, to make a fresh start where no one knew he was other than "the harper". And he chose this over the protests of his superior, his son Robinton.
* Sort of subverted in Yulia Latynina's ''Wizards and Ministers'' (also, a political version): [[EvilChancellor Mr. Nan's]] "all-powerful secretary" [[TheDragon Mr. Shavash]] is suddenly sent out of the capital to a distant province. Some people think that this is an exile and a sign of disfavour. Others think that Mr. Nan is ''deliberately'' arranging this very trope. [[spoiler: It's probably the latter, but everything goes horribly wrong for everyone involved before this plan could bear fruit.]]
* In the third book of Creator/DavidWeber's ''Literature/{{Safehold}}'' series, it gets played somewhat unusually. The commander in question is in fact incompetent, but the general doesn't want to fire him for political reasons, so he puts him in command of the rear of their defense of a mountain pass. Unfortunately, the other side gets around behind them, so they have to move quickly to escape the pass and redeploy. Unfortunately, the incompetent commander has to get moving before the rest of the army can go anywhere.
* Another variant occurs in ''[[Literature/{{Antares}} Antares Passage]]''. Captain Drake has nothing against his Sandarian exchange officer, Ensign Philip Walkirk. However, this particular ensign happens to be [[RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething Crown Prince of Sandar]], and Drake is terrified of the possibility that he might get killed while under Drake's command. So he assigns him to command the Marine detachment, figuring that there's little chance they'll see any action. Later, the Marines end up boarding a Ryall transport. Fortunately, Philip survives unscathed.
* ''TabletopGame/ForgottenRealms'' trilogy ''Return of the Archwizards'' protagonist, Galaeron Nihmedu was assigned to far tomb guard due to wizards vs. sorcerers discrimination. Where he met some "grave robbers" who turns out to be something more, accidentally participated in release of SealedEvilInACan planned anyway, and acquired both priceless report from top Netherese spy, as well as means to put it to good use and save his home city.
* In ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', joining the Night's Watch is seen as a [[ReassignedToAntarctica last resort for criminals and failures]], where they will spend the rest of existence guarding a giant wall in the frozen north, far away from the war and turmoil of the seven kingdoms. However, the Night's Watch is under constant threat from the nomadic [[NobleSavage Wildlings]] and inhuman [[ZombieApocalypse Others]], and after their alliance with King Stannis Baratheon, the Night's Watch proves to be one of the most relevant forces in the war.
** Position of Master of Coin is supposed to be the weakest position on King's council. Basically, the job involves collecting taxes and providing money whenever the king needs it, with no prospects for gaining personal glory or fame, committing valiant deeds, or being remembered at all. Then King Robert assigned the position to Littlefinger...
** From the backstory, there's the rivalry between Unwin Peake, the scheming regent and Hand of the boy-king Aegon III, and Alyn Velaryon, the Oakenfist, a legitimised bastard and popular hero. Eventually Peake ordered Oakenfist to put down the then-ongoing Iron Islands rebellion; this would involve sailing his fleet clear around the continent, through the middle of an ongoing naval war between the Free Cities and the pirates of the Stepstones, to engage a numerically superior foe on his home turf. Unfortunately for Peake, the leader of the Iron Men was murdered by one of his salt wives and his rebellion fell apart, and on the way home Oakenfist managed to [[spoiler:find the king's long-lost brother, Viserys, and bring him home]], making him an even bigger hero than before.
** Aerys ordered [[Characters/ASongOfIceAndFireJaimeLannister Jaime Lannister]] into the Kingsguard to make him basically a hostage against Tywin Lannister, robbing him of his rightful heir, notwithstanding that Jaime had a mind of his own, had a tipping point for Aerys' craziness, was very well armed... and was left alone with the king.
** [[Characters/ASongOfIceAndFireTyrionLannister Tyrion Lannister]] was the subject of being TheUnfavourite his entire life, at one point he mentions that while his siblings were given positions of power, he was put in charge of looking after the sewers. He also notes that while, yes, it was a lowly function, at no other point in Casterly Rock's existence did the sewers work that smoothly and he was quite proud of it.
* A bit of a variation in ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}'': the disgraced Seerow is stationed on the Hork-Bajir homeworld, which the Andalite superiors believe to not be in any way significant. Then the Yeerks arrive. The variation? Seerow is killed almost immediately; it's his daughter (who was stationed there with him) who becomes a heroine due to the reassignment.
* An inversion happens in ''Literature/{{Dune}}'', where Duke Atreides is sent by TheEmperor from his ancestral home planet to the desert planet Arrakis ... which is the only place in the universe that the "spice" that their civilization runs on is made ... and is thus actually the MOST important planet in the universe and best post possible. Of course, the reason the Emperor relocated him there instead of playing the trope straight is that instead of wanting to sink the Duke's career he's [[MagnificentBastard hatching a plot]] to get rid of him directly, which succeeds. [[spoiler:The backfire comes when his son Paul just so happens to be a [[{{Seers}} seer]] and becomes a MessianicArchetype who gathers the ProudWarriorRaceGuy natives together and [[TookALevelInBadAss trains]] them to be a BadAssArmy LaResistance, launching a ''coup d'etat''.]]

to:

* Robert Asprin's ''[[Literature/PhulesCompany Phule]]'' books start In the beginning of ''Literature/IslandInTheSeaOfTimeSeries'', Capt. Marian Alston is assigned to the ''Eagle'', an old World War II-era German boat that's been repurposed as a training vessel for the US Coast Guard, because her superiors strongly suspected that she's a lesbian but didn't want the PR nightmare that might ensue from firing a highly respected black officer over her sexual orientation. She ends up around Nantucket during the Event, and her crew becomes the closest thing that the island has to a military during the turbulent early years of its adjustment to being sent back in time to the Bronze Age, thus making her a power player in the Republic of Nantucket.
* ''Literature/TheMinistryOfPeculiarOccurrences'' begins with Field Agent Eliza Braun being reassigned to the archive, which is a boring job, where she can't play with explosives. Of course, she finds an unsolved case in one of the dusty folders and teams up with Agent Books, the one who is in charge of the archive, to solve it.
* ''Literature/PhulesCompany'' starts
off with the main character getting reassigned for strafing a peace-treaty signing; it's intended as a punishment because his new post involves taking charge of the Space Legion's [[RagtagBunchOfMisfits losers]] on a [[ReassignedToAntarctica backwater planet]]. Of course, things go much differently than planned, and this is more-or-less the last time [[TheGoodCaptain Phule]] and [[BadassCrew the Omega Mob]] get transferred/"promoted"/etc transferred/"promoted"/etc. [[BadBoss without malicious intentions]].
**
intentions]]. Tellingly, the only reason Phule was reassigned at all and not court-martialed was due to the fact that his father owned the largest munitions company in the galaxy. The Legion's top brass was intending Phule to become so fed up with his RagtagBandOfMisfits that he would voluntarily quit, as a bored, rich kid can find other ways to amuse himself.
* In ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles,'' Murphy's position as the head of Special Investigations is where people you really, really don't like get sent and they soon leave, disgusted with it. Murphy's the first person who's stayed long enough to warrant a nameplate.
** This is due to the fact that before Murphy, every SI head simply refused to acknowledge that anything supernatural was going on. This lead to none of their cases ever being closed, and a quick dismissal. Murphy actually decided to start believing in the paranormal and so she actually did get results.
** Though in the end even she can't avoid all the problems associated with the position. In ''Literature/WhiteNight'' [[spoiler:she is demoted]], and by the end of ''Literature/{{Changes}}'' [[spoiler:her dereliction of duty results in her being summarily fired.]]
* In ''TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}}'' novels:
** In Creator/DanAbnett's ''Literature/GauntsGhosts'' novels, Colonel-Commissar Gaunt has been living in reassignment hell for the last 15 years. The fact that such reassignments have backfired time and time again have not stopped the higher-ups whom he has offended to keep trying. The reassignments have been meant to do a little more than get his career stuck, so it's also a case of SurprisinglyEliteCannonFodder since most of Gaunt's men also manage to survive the experience.
** Inverted by a fellow Commissar, Creator/SandyMitchell's Literature/CiaphasCain (HERO OF THE IMPERIUM), who ''wants'' a nice, comfortable out-of-the-way post in order to keep himself out of harm's way. He'll "heroically" volunteer for the most boring posting he can, only to somehow put himself in the most dangerous spot possible. Ironically, his tendency to find himself running up against seemingly impossible odds and [[IndyPloy triumphing by sheer dumb luck]] have earned him the status of a [[FakeUltimateHero Hero of the Imperium]], meaning he's ''expected'' to be at the front lines, facing enemy fire. From his perspective, he's now suffering the trope since he's forced to accept these assignments to keep up his reputation and not disappoint his friends and colleagues. A straight example is his aide, Gunner Jurgen. The malodorous soldier was originally assigned to Cain as a practical joke, but between his skill as a soldier and hidden AntiMagic abilities the arrangement became the foundation of Cain's rise to fame.
* In Creator/LoisMcMasterBujold's ''Literature/VorkosiganSaga'', Miles Vorkosigan is assigned to Kyril Island, an out-of-the-way training base, as the Weather Officer. This is specifically a test to see if he can handle a normal, boring assignment without causing problems, since his ongoing insubordination and need to ''do something'' doesn't fly in a real military posting. Before his tour of duty was up he had joined a mutiny and barely avoided treason charges, the fallout of which got his commanding officer dishonorably discharged. As usual, it's genetic. Aral Vorkosigan had ups and downs like this. He'd do the right thing, but nobody would like it, so he'd get assigned to some punishment post...and come out of it smelling like roses. Most notably, this was part of ThePlan that turned him into the Barrayaran {{Cincinnatus}}.
* In the first ''Literature/ThursdayNext'' book ''The Eyre Affair'', literary detective Next gets transferred to a [=SpecOps=] post in Swindon (which also happens to be her [[QuirkyTown quirky]] hometown). Her colleagues are puzzled at her seeming demotion (when she could have chosen a better post), but Thursday [[WriteBackToTheFuture knows what she's doing]].
* In Creator/LEModesittJr's SpaceOpera novel ''The Ethos Effect'' the main character, a former military spaceship commander responsible for a PR disaster (everyone knows he [[IDidWhatIHadToDo did what he had to do]], but being responsible for the loss of a large passenger ship doesn't make you popular) ends up being the "victim" of one of these; he's given a weird assignment that doesn't match his experience, working at an embassy on a planet he's completely unfamiliar with. He ends up foiling an assassination attempt targeting diplomats from multiple interstellar nations. [[spoiler:Which angers his superiors even more, because, as the main character eventually realizes, they were ''behind the assassination attempt'' and didn't intend for him to actually succeed at his job. In fact, they didn't even intend for him to [[UriahGambit survive the journey to the planet]]; the unidentified spaceship that attacked him en route was actually [[FalseFlagOperation one of their own ships]].]]
* In ''The ESP Worm'' by Creator/PiersAnthony, the hero is the President's deadbeat cousin, who was given the supposedly meaningless job of negotiating with any aliens that ever happened to come to Earth. Humans have never come in contact with an alien before, but there's a first time for everything, and naturally, it comes as a surprise to everyone when the titular worm is the first alien to come to Earth.
* ''Literature/{{Discworld}}'':
** In the novel ''Literature/ThiefOfTime'', several of the managers of the History Monks assign Lobsang Ludd (a troublesome child) be the apprentice of Lu Tze (widely seen as a great hero, but has lots of fun annoying the other monks), on the basis that either or both will break the other. [[spoiler:Their combined efforts end up saving the world ...]]
** Vetinari invokes this ''intentionally'' with Moist von Lipwig in ''Literature/GoingPostal'' by putting the sentenced-to-death criminal to work reforming the Ankh-Mopork postal office, a job that has so far claimed the lives of the last four people who tried in short order, and assigning him an [[ImplacableMan Implacable Parole Officer]]. [[XanatosGambit If he succeeds, the Post Office is up and running again. If he doesn't, well, the city was prepared to kill him anyway, one way or the other.]] As he later describes it, [[spoiler:it was a cruel joke that fortunately backfired in the best way possible.]]
** The advent of Mustrum Ridcully to Arch-Chancellor was the result of a spectacular error by scheming wizards who wanted an unworldly rural wizard in position to allow them time to scheme and plot, with a deliberately chosen weak nonentity in the figurehead role. What they actually ''got'' was a runbustious Creator/BrianBlessed of a man, who proved himself unkillable, who grabbed the role by the scruff of the neck and became the longest-serving Arch-Chancellor in history. His brother Hughnon suceeded a weak and doddering High Priest (killed by a dragon) through what the reader suspects is the same mechanism.
* In the second Literature/ArtemisFowl novel ''Artemis Fowl: The Arctic Incident'' elf LEP recon captain Holly Short is assigned to guarding an abandoned shuttle port where nothing has happened in literally a hundred years. Naturally, she encounters a huge goblin smuggling program which involves the use of a human contact and illegal weapons.
* {{Literature/Flashman}} is a good example of this. Harry Flashman, freshly expelled from Rugby School, joins the prestigious 11th Hussars. Within a year, he gets into a duel over a woman, and is posted to Glasgow, assisting the local militia against agitating mill workers. He seduces the prettiest daughter of the mill owner he's billeted with, and is forced to marry her. This doesn't sit well with Lord Cardigan, the commander of the 11th Hussars, and he gets posted again, this time to India (a location hated and despised by Cardigan). Flashman's skill with a horse and lance impresses the Governor General, and he's sent as an ADC to Kabul, on General Elphinstone's staff. He gains (stolen) credit with the natives as "Bloody Lance", the lone killer of five would-be assassins, and gains credit with the military and public when he's one of the few survivors of the Kabul Retreat, and "defends" a small fort outside the besieged Jalalabad -- he's found surrounded by dead, clutching the flag to his chest. As the only (white) survivor, he feels free to not contradict the CO's assumption that he wasn't cowering uselessly in bed, and was in fact about to throw the flag to the attackers. He gets a hero's send-off from India, a hero's welcome upon his return, and a medal from Queen Victoria herself.
* In the ''Literature/DragonridersOfPern'' series, this appeared to be the case with Masterharper Petiron, the old harper of Menolly's repressed, backwater fishing hold. Subverted later in ''Masterharper of Pern'', when we find out that Petiron asked to be sent there, to make a fresh start where no one knew he was other than "the harper". And he chose this over the protests of his superior, his son Robinton.
* Sort of subverted in Yulia Latynina's ''Wizards and Ministers'' (also, a political version): [[EvilChancellor Mr. Nan's]] "all-powerful secretary" [[TheDragon Mr. Shavash]] is suddenly sent out of the capital to a distant province. Some people think that this is an exile and a sign of disfavour. Others think that Mr. Nan is ''deliberately'' arranging this very trope. [[spoiler: It's probably the latter, but everything goes horribly wrong for everyone involved before this plan could bear fruit.]]
* In the third book of Creator/DavidWeber's ''Literature/{{Safehold}}'' series, it gets played somewhat unusually. The commander in question is in fact incompetent, but the general doesn't want to fire him for political reasons, so he puts him in command of the rear of their defense of a mountain pass. Unfortunately, the other side gets around behind them, so they have to move quickly to escape the pass and redeploy. Unfortunately, the incompetent commander has to get moving before the rest of the army can go anywhere.
* Another variant occurs in ''[[Literature/{{Antares}} Antares Passage]]''. Captain Drake has nothing against his Sandarian exchange officer, Ensign Philip Walkirk. However, this particular ensign happens to be [[RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething Crown Prince of Sandar]], and Drake is terrified of the possibility that he might get killed while under Drake's command. So he assigns him to command the Marine detachment, figuring that there's little chance they'll see any action. Later, the Marines end up boarding a Ryall transport. Fortunately, Philip survives unscathed.
* ''TabletopGame/ForgottenRealms'' trilogy ''Return of the Archwizards'' protagonist, Galaeron Nihmedu was assigned to far tomb guard due to wizards vs. sorcerers discrimination. Where he met some "grave robbers" who turns out to be something more, accidentally participated in release of SealedEvilInACan planned anyway, and acquired both priceless report from top Netherese spy, as well as means to put it to good use and save his home city.
* In ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'', joining the Night's Watch is seen as a [[ReassignedToAntarctica last resort for criminals and failures]], where they will spend the rest of existence guarding a giant wall in the frozen north, far away from the war and turmoil of the seven kingdoms. However, the Night's Watch is under constant threat from the nomadic [[NobleSavage Wildlings]] and inhuman [[ZombieApocalypse Others]], and after their alliance with King Stannis Baratheon, the Night's Watch proves to be one of the most relevant forces in the war.
** Position of Master of Coin is supposed to be the weakest position on King's council. Basically, the job involves collecting taxes and providing money whenever the king needs it, with no prospects for gaining personal glory or fame, committing valiant deeds, or being remembered at all. Then King Robert assigned the position to Littlefinger...
** From the backstory, there's the rivalry between Unwin Peake, the scheming regent and Hand of the boy-king Aegon III, and Alyn Velaryon, the Oakenfist, a legitimised bastard and popular hero. Eventually Peake ordered Oakenfist to put down the then-ongoing Iron Islands rebellion; this would involve sailing his fleet clear around the continent, through the middle of an ongoing naval war between the Free Cities and the pirates of the Stepstones, to engage a numerically superior foe on his home turf. Unfortunately for Peake, the leader of the Iron Men was murdered by one of his salt wives and his rebellion fell apart, and on the way home Oakenfist managed to [[spoiler:find the king's long-lost brother, Viserys, and bring him home]], making him an even bigger hero than before.
** Aerys ordered [[Characters/ASongOfIceAndFireJaimeLannister Jaime Lannister]] into the Kingsguard to make him basically a hostage against Tywin Lannister, robbing him of his rightful heir, notwithstanding that Jaime had a mind of his own, had a tipping point for Aerys' craziness, was very well armed... and was left alone with the king.
** [[Characters/ASongOfIceAndFireTyrionLannister Tyrion Lannister]] was the subject of being TheUnfavourite his entire life, at one point he mentions that while his siblings were given positions of power, he was put in charge of looking after the sewers. He also notes that while, yes, it was a lowly function, at no other point in Casterly Rock's existence did the sewers work that smoothly and he was quite proud of it.
* A bit of a variation in ''Literature/{{Animorphs}}'': the disgraced Seerow is stationed on the Hork-Bajir homeworld, which the Andalite superiors believe to not be in any way significant. Then the Yeerks arrive. The variation? Seerow is killed almost immediately; it's his daughter (who was stationed there with him) who becomes a heroine due to the reassignment.
* An inversion happens in ''Literature/{{Dune}}'', where Duke Atreides is sent by TheEmperor from his ancestral home planet to the desert planet Arrakis ... which is the only place in the universe that the "spice" that their civilization runs on is made ... and is thus actually the MOST important planet in the universe and best post possible. Of course, the reason the Emperor relocated him there instead of playing the trope straight is that instead of wanting to sink the Duke's career he's [[MagnificentBastard hatching a plot]] to get rid of him directly, which succeeds. [[spoiler:The backfire comes when his son Paul just so happens to be a [[{{Seers}} seer]] and becomes a MessianicArchetype who gathers the ProudWarriorRaceGuy natives together and [[TookALevelInBadAss trains]] them to be a BadAssArmy LaResistance, launching a ''coup d'etat''.]]
himself.



* Wedge Antilles in the [[Literature/XWingSeries Wraith Squadron]] series is GenreSavvy enough to take advantage of this trope. To create Wraith Squadron, he deliberately cherry picks skilled pilots who are about to be washed out or court-martialed. This is because it's easier than trying to cherry pick the best of the best, since rival squadron leaders would fight to keep their aces, but wouldn't care if they could get rid of an unwanted pilot. Sure enough, the [[RagtagBunchOfMisfits Ragtag Squadron of Misfits]] basically [[IndyPloy Indy Ploys]] their way into legend.
** He'd initially started with fifty candidates. He'd ''hoped'' to trim that to twelve, but for various reasons, only ten were fit to join the squadron at all, forcing him to round out the numbers by adding himself (as leader) and Wes Janson. Still, he had ''expected'' that he'd get a lot of irredeemables among the misfits, so he was still pleased that he was able to come up with anything near a full squadron.
** Sort of also applies to Thrawn, he was reassigned to his old stomping ground in the Unknowns to calm his political opponents. The fact that he made [[FourStarBadass Grand Admiral]] on his tactical prowess rather than any political links made this a foregone outcome. [[spoiler: Although we find out later that his "exile" was a cover story for a mission to pacify and organize the Unknown Regions... which he did, to the tune of 250 sectors, one quarter of the size of the Galactic Empire at its height, and far larger than the Imperial Remnant by the time our heroes stumble upon it.]]
* Literature/SanoIchiro is sent to Nagasaki in ''The Way of the Traitor'' by his rival [[EvilChancellor Chamberlain]] Yanagisawa in hopes that he will destroy his career on a difficult case there; instead, Sano successfully solves the case and adds to his sterling reputation.
* Happens twice in the Schofield series, in Area 7 he is assigned to protect the president so that he can avoid the press while still being seen regularly due to the events of the first book. Of course a conspiracy puts him right back into action almost immediately. Then after the events of the third book he is assigned to an outpost in the Arctic which he quite enjoys, and then terrorists invade an old soviet weapons facility right near his location. [[spoiler:In a bit of a twist there is also a well armed, and well trained army regiment nearby but the terrorists are expecting them and they're killed off quickly.]]
* In the beginning of the ''Literature/IslandInTheSeaOfTimeSeries'', Capt. Marian Alston is assigned to the ''Eagle'', an old World War II-era German boat that's been repurposed as a training vessel for the US Coast Guard, because her superiors strongly suspected that she's a lesbian but didn't want the PR nightmare that might ensue from firing a highly-respected black officer over her sexual orientation. She ends up around Nantucket during the Event, and her crew becomes the closest thing that the island has to a military during the turbulent early years of its adjustment to being sent back in time to the Bronze Age, thus making her a power player in the Republic of Nantucket.
* ''Literature/TheFourthProtocol''. [=MI5=] investigator John Preston is reassigned to Ports & Airports after annoying his PointyHairedBoss. This puts him in the position to investigate a Soviet plot to smuggle the components of an atomic bomb into the country. When he tries to get the attention of his boss re this plot, he's put on leave -- this gives him the time to run a RogueAgent operation to track down the agent assembling the bomb.
* Invoked as part of [[AllAccordingtoPlan The Plan]] in Creator/DianeDuane's ''Literature/MyEnemyMyAlly'': Ael's career is in political eclipse when she is assigned to the neutral zone for her opposition to a program weaponizing Romulan psionic potential. She and James T. Kirk arrange for her 'Capture' of the U.S.S. Enterprise, to the consternation of her superiors. [[spoiler: A sufficient prize that she is ordered to haul the prize vessel directly back to Romulus - right by the station running the project]]. She declines taking it any further as Kirk tries to have her capture more ships as well; She notes that she can, on the strength of her reputation, barely justify winning a a pitched battle with the Enterprise with a Romulan Warbird, but Romulan High command knows she's not equal to the entire task force Kirk lightly suggests, including the Battleship Inaiau.
* In ''Literature/{{Farsight}}'', the Fire Caste commanders of Tau were getting a bit too popular for their Ethereal superiors' comfort, so two of them were placed in cryostasis despite dire need for their skills. The third commander was sent '''far''' away, across a gulf in space that takes years to travel through- ordered to reclaim colonies that humans had stolen from the Tau. The Ethereals gave him a lot of ships and personnel and figured they'd never have to deal with him again, because all prior wars against humans had ended in a CurbStompBattle. Except that the commander ''did'' manage to cross the gulf, and ''did'' fight the humans off, and ''did'' reclaim the colonies. And he was so upset with the Ethereals by this point that he and all the colonies he'd conquered went rogue...proving to every Tau that life without the Ethereals' authority is possible.
* ''Literature/TheDeathOfRussia'': Viktor Aksyuchits, a member of the National Salvation Front who wasn't an extremist (instead being [[TokenGoodTeammate a fairly standard Christian Democrat]]), was [[ReassignedToAntarctica made the regional governor of Primorsky]] in order to get him away far away from any meaningful position in Moscow. As Siberia and the Far East descend into anarchy when the Second Russian Civil War kicks off, he [[spoiler: declares Primorsky's independence as the Far Eastern Republic, and becomes a beloved leader after leading the young nation through a North Korean invasion]].

to:

* Invoked as part of ThePlan in the ''Literature/{{Rihannsu}}'' book ''My Enemy, My Ally'': Ael's career is in political eclipse when she is assigned to the neutral zone for her opposition to a program weaponizing Romulan psionic potential. She and James T. Kirk arrange for her 'Capture' of the U.S.S. ''Enterprise'', to the consternation of her superiors. [[spoiler:A sufficient prize that she is ordered to haul the prize vessel directly back to Romulus -- right by the station running the project.]] She declines taking it any further as Kirk tries to have her capture more ships as well; She notes that she can, on the strength of her reputation, barely justify winning a pitched battle with the ''Enterprise'' with a Romulan Warbird, but Romulan High command knows she's not equal to the entire task force Kirk lightly suggests, including the Battleship Inaiau.
* Played somewhat unusually in the third ''Literature/{{Safehold}}'' book. The commander in question is in fact incompetent, but the general doesn't want to fire him for political reasons, so he puts him in command of the rear of their defense of a mountain pass. Unfortunately, the other side gets around behind them, so they have to move quickly to escape the pass and redeploy. Unfortunately, the incompetent commander has to get moving before the rest of the army can go anywhere.
* ''Literature/SanoIchiro'': In ''The Way of the Traitor'', Sano is sent to Nagasaki by his rival [[EvilChancellor Chamberlain]] Yanagisawa in hopes that he will destroy his career on a difficult case there; instead, Sano successfully solves the case and adds to his sterling reputation.
* Happens twice in the ''Schofield'' series. In ''Area 7'', Schofield is assigned to protect the president so that he can avoid the press while still being seen regularly due to the events of the first book. Of course, a conspiracy puts him right back into action almost immediately. Then after the events of the third book, he is assigned to an outpost in the Arctic which he quite enjoys, and then terrorists invade an old Soviet weapons facility right near his location. [[spoiler:In a bit of a twist, there is also a well-armed and well-trained army regiment nearby, but the terrorists are expecting them, and they're killed off quickly.]]
* ''Literature/ASongOfIceAndFire'':
** Joining the Night's Watch is seen as a [[ReassignedToAntarctica last resort for criminals and failures]], where they will spend the rest of existence guarding a giant wall in the frozen north, far away from the war and turmoil of the seven kingdoms. However, the Night's Watch is under constant threat from the nomadic [[NobleSavage Wildlings]] and inhuman [[ZombieApocalypse Others]], and after their alliance with King Stannis Baratheon, the Night's Watch proves to be one of the most relevant forces in the war.
** Position of Master of Coin is supposed to be the weakest position on King's council. Basically, the job involves collecting taxes and providing money whenever the king needs it, with no prospects for gaining personal glory or fame, committing valiant deeds, or being remembered at all. Then King Robert assigned the position to Littlefinger...
** From the backstory, there's the rivalry between Unwin Peake, the scheming regent and Hand of the boy-king Aegon III, and Alyn Velaryon, the Oakenfist, a legitimised bastard and popular hero. Eventually Peake ordered Oakenfist to put down the then-ongoing Iron Islands rebellion; this would involve sailing his fleet clear around the continent, through the middle of an ongoing naval war between the Free Cities and the pirates of the Stepstones, to engage a numerically superior foe on his home turf. Unfortunately for Peake, the leader of the Iron Men was murdered by one of his salt wives and his rebellion fell apart, and on the way home Oakenfist managed to [[spoiler:find the king's long-lost brother, Viserys, and bring him home]], making him an even bigger hero than before.
** Aerys ordered [[Characters/ASongOfIceAndFireJaimeLannister Jaime Lannister]] into the Kingsguard to make him basically a hostage against Tywin Lannister, robbing him of his rightful heir, notwithstanding that Jaime had a mind of his own, had a tipping point for Aerys' craziness, was very well armed... and was left alone with the king.
** [[Characters/ASongOfIceAndFireTyrionLannister Tyrion Lannister]] was the subject of being TheUnfavourite his entire life, at one point he mentions that while his siblings were given positions of power, he was put in charge of looking after the sewers. He also notes that while, yes, it was a lowly function, at no other point in Casterly Rock's existence did the sewers work that smoothly and he was quite proud of it.
* ''Franchise/StarWarsLegends'':
**
Wedge Antilles in the [[Literature/XWingSeries Wraith Squadron]] series ''Literature/XWingSeries'' is GenreSavvy enough to take advantage of this trope. To create Wraith Squadron, he deliberately cherry picks cherry-picks skilled pilots who are about to be washed out or court-martialed. This is because it's easier than trying to cherry pick the best of the best, since rival squadron leaders would fight to keep their aces, but wouldn't care if they could get rid of an unwanted pilot. Sure enough, the [[RagtagBunchOfMisfits Ragtag Squadron of Misfits]] basically [[IndyPloy Indy Ploys]] their way into legend.
** He'd
court-martialed.[[note]]He'd initially started with fifty candidates. He'd candidates; he'd ''hoped'' to trim that to twelve, but for various reasons, only ten were fit to join the squadron at all, forcing him to round out the numbers by adding himself (as leader) and Wes Janson. Still, he had ''expected'' that he'd get a lot of irredeemables among the misfits, so he was still pleased that he was able to come up with anything near a full squadron.
squadron.[[/note]] This is because it's easier than trying to cherry-pick the best of the best, since rival squadron leaders would fight to keep their aces, but wouldn't care if they could get rid of an unwanted pilot. Sure enough, the [[RagtagBunchOfMisfits Ragtag Squadron of Misfits]] basically {{Indy Ploy}}s their way into legend.
** Sort of also applies to Thrawn, he was reassigned to his old stomping ground in the Unknowns to calm his political opponents. The fact that he made [[FourStarBadass Grand Admiral]] on his tactical prowess rather than any political links made this a foregone outcome. [[spoiler: Although [[spoiler:However, we find out later that his "exile" was a cover story for a mission to pacify and organize the Unknown Regions... which he did, to the tune of 250 sectors, one quarter of the size of the Galactic Empire at its height, and far larger than the Imperial Remnant by the time our heroes stumble upon it.]]
* Literature/SanoIchiro is sent to Nagasaki in In the first ''Literature/ThursdayNext'' book, ''The Way of the Traitor'' by his rival [[EvilChancellor Chamberlain]] Yanagisawa Eyre Affair'', literary detective Next gets transferred to a [=SpecOps=] post in hopes that he will destroy his career on a difficult case there; instead, Sano successfully solves the case and adds Swindon (which also happens to his sterling reputation.
be her [[QuirkyTown quirky]] hometown). Her colleagues are puzzled at her seeming demotion (when she could have chosen a better post), but Thursday [[WriteBackToTheFuture knows what she's doing]].
* Happens twice in the Schofield series, in Area 7 he ''Literature/VorkosiganSaga'': Miles Vorkosigan is assigned to protect Kyril Island, an out-of-the-way training base, as the president so that Weather Officer. This is specifically a test to see if he can avoid handle a normal, boring assignment without causing problems, since his ongoing insubordination and need to ''do something'' doesn't fly in a real military posting. Before his tour of duty was up, he had joined a mutiny and barely avoided treason charges, the press while still being seen regularly due to fallout of which got his commanding officer dishonorably discharged. As usual, it's genetic. Aral Vorkosigan had ups and downs like this. He'd do the events of the first book. Of course a conspiracy puts him right back into action almost immediately. Then after the events of the third book he is thing, but nobody would like it, so he'd get assigned to an outpost some punishment post... and come out of it smelling like roses. Most notably, this was part of ThePlan that turned him into the Barrayaran {{Cincinnatus}}.
* ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'':
** In the ''Literature/GauntsGhosts'' novels, Colonel-Commissar Gaunt has been living in reassignment hell for the last 15 years. The fact that such reassignments have backfired time and time again have not stopped the higher-ups whom he has offended to keep trying. The reassignments have been meant to do a little more than get his career stuck, so it's also a case of SurprisinglyEliteCannonFodder since most of Gaunt's men also manage to survive the experience.
** Inverted by a fellow Commissar, Literature/CiaphasCain (HERO OF THE IMPERIUM), who ''wants'' a nice, comfortable out-of-the-way post in order to keep himself out of harm's way. He'll "heroically" volunteer for the most boring posting he can, only to somehow put himself
in the Arctic which he quite enjoys, most dangerous spot possible. Ironically, his tendency to find himself running up against seemingly impossible odds and then terrorists invade an old soviet weapons facility right near his location. [[spoiler:In a bit [[IndyPloy triumphing by sheer dumb luck]] have earned him the status of a twist there is also a well armed, and well trained army regiment nearby but the terrorists are expecting them and they're killed off quickly.]]
* In the beginning
[[FakeUltimateHero Hero of the ''Literature/IslandInTheSeaOfTimeSeries'', Capt. Marian Alston Imperium]], meaning he's ''expected'' to be at the front lines, facing enemy fire. From his perspective, he's now suffering the trope since he's forced to accept these assignments to keep up his reputation and not disappoint his friends and colleagues. A straight example is his aide, Gunner Jurgen. The malodorous soldier was originally assigned to the ''Eagle'', an old World War II-era German boat that's been repurposed Cain as a training vessel for practical joke, but between his skill as a soldier and hidden AntiMagic abilities the US Coast Guard, because her superiors strongly suspected that she's a lesbian but didn't want arrangement became the PR nightmare that might ensue from firing a highly-respected black officer over her sexual orientation. She ends up around Nantucket during the Event, and her crew becomes the closest thing that the island has foundation of Cain's rise to a military during the turbulent early years of its adjustment to being sent back in time to the Bronze Age, thus making her a power player in the Republic of Nantucket.
* ''Literature/TheFourthProtocol''. [=MI5=] investigator John Preston is reassigned to Ports & Airports after annoying his PointyHairedBoss. This puts him in the position to investigate a Soviet plot to smuggle the components of an atomic bomb into the country. When he tries to get the attention of his boss re this plot, he's put on leave -- this gives him the time to run a RogueAgent operation to track down the agent assembling the bomb.
* Invoked as part of [[AllAccordingtoPlan The Plan]] in Creator/DianeDuane's ''Literature/MyEnemyMyAlly'': Ael's career is in political eclipse when she is assigned to the neutral zone for her opposition to a program weaponizing Romulan psionic potential. She and James T. Kirk arrange for her 'Capture' of the U.S.S. Enterprise, to the consternation of her superiors. [[spoiler: A sufficient prize that she is ordered to haul the prize vessel directly back to Romulus - right by the station running the project]]. She declines taking it any further as Kirk tries to have her capture more ships as well; She notes that she can, on the strength of her reputation, barely justify winning a a pitched battle with the Enterprise with a Romulan Warbird, but Romulan High command knows she's not equal to the entire task force Kirk lightly suggests, including the Battleship Inaiau.
*
fame.
**
In ''Literature/{{Farsight}}'', the Fire Caste commanders of Tau were getting a bit too popular for their Ethereal superiors' comfort, so two of them were placed in cryostasis despite dire need for their skills. The third commander was sent '''far''' away, across a gulf in space that takes years to travel through- ordered to reclaim colonies that humans had stolen from the Tau. The Ethereals gave him a lot of ships and personnel and figured they'd never have to deal with him again, because all prior wars against humans had ended in a CurbStompBattle. Except that the commander ''did'' manage to cross the gulf, and ''did'' fight the humans off, and ''did'' reclaim the colonies. And he was so upset with the Ethereals by this point that he and all the colonies he'd conquered went rogue...proving to every Tau that life without the Ethereals' authority is possible.
* ''Literature/TheDeathOfRussia'': Viktor Aksyuchits, Sort of subverted in Creator/YuliaLatynina's ''Wizards and Ministers'' (also, a member political version): [[EvilChancellor Mr. Nan]]'s "all-powerful secretary" [[TheDragon Mr. Shavash]] is suddenly sent out of the National Salvation Front who wasn't capital to a distant province. Some people think that this is an extremist (instead being [[TokenGoodTeammate exile and a fairly standard Christian Democrat]]), was [[ReassignedToAntarctica made sign of disfavour. Others think that Mr. Nan is ''deliberately'' arranging this very trope. [[spoiler:It's probably the regional governor of Primorsky]] in order to get him away far away from any meaningful position in Moscow. As Siberia and the Far East descend into anarchy when the Second Russian Civil War kicks off, he [[spoiler: declares Primorsky's independence as the Far Eastern Republic, and becomes a beloved leader after leading the young nation through a North Korean invasion]].latter, but everything goes horribly wrong for everyone involved before this plan could bear fruit.]]



[[folder:Live Action TV]]
* Captain Parmenter from ''Series/FTroop'' was KickedUpstairs to a command position at Fort Courage after his {{accidental hero}}ism at the Battle of Appomatox caused some embarrasment to the U.S. Army.
* Played with in ''Series/DueSouth'': Fraser was assigned liaison duty with the Canadian Consulate in Chicago as retribution for arresting a fellow Mountie -- and for being, in general, just a little ''too good'' for anyone at home to feel really comfortable with. He becomes something of a local phenomenon in Chicago, but remains ''persona non grata'' at home, and the Consulate continues to function as an apparent dumping ground for misfits.

to:

[[folder:Live Action TV]]
* Captain Parmenter from ''Series/FTroop'' was KickedUpstairs to a command position at Fort Courage after his {{accidental hero}}ism at the Battle of Appomatox caused some embarrasment to the U.S. Army.
* Played with in ''Series/DueSouth'': Fraser was assigned liaison duty with the Canadian Consulate in Chicago as retribution for arresting a fellow Mountie -- and for being, in general, just a little ''too good'' for anyone at home to feel really comfortable with. He becomes something of a local phenomenon in Chicago, but remains ''persona non grata'' at home, and the Consulate continues to function as an apparent dumping ground for misfits.
[[folder:Live-Action TV]]



** After making too many political enemies on Earth, [=EarthGov=] promotes Sinclair to Ambassador and [[ReassignedToAntarctica posts him to Minbar]] as a method of quietly shipping him out of the way. They also don't provide him with staff or funding. Largely ignored by the Earth Alliance Sinclair instead becomes the ''Entil'zha'' of the ''Anla'shok'' (Rangers) and then [[StableTimeLoop travels back in time]] to become the Minbari religious figure Valen.

to:

** After making too many political enemies on Earth, [=EarthGov=] promotes Sinclair to Ambassador and [[ReassignedToAntarctica posts him to Minbar]] as a method of quietly shipping him out of the way. They also don't provide him with staff or funding. Largely ignored by the Earth Alliance Alliance, Sinclair instead becomes the ''Entil'zha'' of the ''Anla'shok'' (Rangers) and then [[StableTimeLoop travels back in time]] time to become the Minbari religious figure Valen.Valen]].



** Londo's assistant Vir was sent there because his progressive views were seen as an embarrassment to the family. Vir's reassignment to Minbar also counts. At that time Babylon 5 was one of the most important places and Vir was acting as Londo's conscience. Londo had him reassigned to Minbar since having someone acting like your conscience can get in the way when you're busy making a DealWithTheDevil. Vir ended up working against his own government to save Narns. In the sequel novels, that also gives him credibility with the Interstellar Alliance to support his claim to the throne to help drive out the Drakh who secretly dominate the Centauri Republic. [[spoiler:Vir later becomes Emperor after Londo]].
* ''Series/DoctorWho'''s "[[Recap/DoctorWho20thASTheFiveDoctors The Five Doctors]]" subverts this, when [[spoiler: The Doctor is made President of Gallifrey in the hopes of tying him to the the position and halting his endless gallivanting across time and space, and instead of coming quietly to rule from behind a desk, he gives an order placing the one who promoted him in command until his return and dashes off in the TARDIS with no intention of returning.]]
** [[spoiler: He finally showed an interest in the post in "Trial of a Time Lord" when he tried to play the 'Presidential immunity from prosecution card' only to find out that he had been deposed during his absence for neglecting his duties.]]
* Happened in ''Series/TheGreatestAmericanHero'' when Bill Maxwell's boss, exasperated with his loss of government cars, assigns him a Volkswagen bug and the case of a missing circus clown. It leads to him busting a major spy ring. The bad guy even tells Bill he'll get a promotion out of the case.
* Subverted in ''Series/{{MASH}}'' in "Fade Out, Fade In". Charles is sent to the 4077th by a higher officer who owes him money. Shortly after his arrival he is able to prove his surgical skills are invaluable, ensuring, much to his chagrin, that he becomes the permanent tentmate of Hawkeye and BJ.
** Played straight a few seasons later when the higher officer came back. Because of a sequence of events that would lead to trouble, he expects Winchester to cover for him so that Margaret's career would be ruined and his career would be fine, with a reward of finally going back to Tokyo. Due to CharacterDevelopment making him turn from a {{Jerkass}} to a JerkWithAHeartOfGold, Winchester has enough morals to loudly call him on it.

to:

** Londo's assistant Vir was sent there because his progressive views were seen as an embarrassment to the family. Vir's reassignment to Minbar also counts. At that time Babylon 5 was one of the most important places and Vir was acting as Londo's conscience. Londo had him reassigned to Minbar since having someone acting like your conscience can get in the way when you're busy making a DealWithTheDevil. Vir ended up working against his own government to save Narns. In the sequel novels, that also gives him credibility with the Interstellar Alliance to support his claim to the throne to help drive out the Drakh who secretly dominate the Centauri Republic. [[spoiler:Vir later becomes Emperor after Londo]].
* ''Series/DoctorWho'''s "[[Recap/DoctorWho20thASTheFiveDoctors The Five Doctors]]" subverts this, when [[spoiler: The Doctor is made President of Gallifrey in the hopes of tying him to the the position and halting his endless gallivanting across time and space, and instead of coming quietly to rule from behind a desk, he gives an order placing the one who promoted him in command until his return and dashes off in the TARDIS with no intention of returning.]]
** [[spoiler: He finally showed an interest in the post in "Trial of a Time Lord" when he tried to play the 'Presidential immunity from prosecution card' only to find out that he had been deposed during his absence for neglecting his duties.]]
* Happened in ''Series/TheGreatestAmericanHero'' when Bill Maxwell's boss, exasperated with his loss of government cars, assigns him a Volkswagen bug and the case of a missing circus clown. It leads to him busting a major spy ring. The bad guy even tells Bill he'll get a promotion out of the case.
* Subverted in ''Series/{{MASH}}'' in "Fade Out, Fade In". Charles is sent to the 4077th by a higher officer who owes him money. Shortly after his arrival he is able to prove his surgical skills are invaluable, ensuring, much to his chagrin, that he becomes the permanent tentmate of Hawkeye and BJ.
** Played straight a few seasons later when the higher officer came back. Because of a sequence of events that would lead to trouble, he expects Winchester to cover for him so that Margaret's career would be ruined and his career would be fine, with a reward of finally going back to Tokyo. Due to CharacterDevelopment making him turn from a {{Jerkass}} to a JerkWithAHeartOfGold, Winchester has enough morals to loudly call him on it.
Londo.]]



** Commander William Adama, assigned to the so-old-we're-using-it-as-a-museum [[TheBattlestar Battlestar]] ''Galactica''. We all know how that turned out. One can guess that many of the other officers and crew were sent there to get them out of the way. Tigh certainly didn't seem to be a model XO and Starbuck was the queen of insubordination. If you were competent and ambitious you probably did not get assigned to the ''Galactica''.

to:

** Commander William Adama, assigned to the so-old-we're-using-it-as-a-museum [[BreakOutTheMuseumPiece so-old-we're-using-it-as-a-museum]] ''Galactica'', which ended up being the only [[TheBattlestar Battlestar]] ''Galactica''. We all know how that turned out.not incapacitated by the Cylons due to not being networked. One can guess that many of the other officers and crew were sent there to get them out of the way. Tigh certainly didn't seem to be a model XO and Starbuck was the queen of insubordination. If you were competent and ambitious you probably did not get assigned to the ''Galactica''.



* ''Series/TheWire'':
** In the first season, a RagtagBunchOfMisfits is put on a deadend assignment. They ([[TheRemnant mostly]]) succeed in taking down the biggest drug empire in West Baltimore.
** By the start of Season 2, [[CowboyCop McNulty]] has been put in his nightmare assignment of harbour patrol, and manages to blow open a human trafficking operation. In a variation on the usual trope, this isn't so much out of irrepressible heroism as it is [[InvokedTrope a calculated attempt to embarrass his old boss]]. He's already so low on the career ladder that [[DaChief Rawls]] can't do anything meaningful in retaliation anyway.
** Prez gets [[PoliceBrutality justifiably stripped of his gun]] and stuck on a desk. Turns out his intelligence and skill at pattern-recognition mean he's much more effective as a DeskJockey than he was as a beat cop.
** Michael Santangelo is a somewhat incompetent Homicide detective who is assigned by Rawls to the Barksdale detail, ostensibly to spy on [=McNulty=]. When Bunk and [=McNulty=] help him out of a jam, Santangelo refuses to rat on a fellow officer, and thus takes a demotion to a patrol officer in the Western District. When [=McNulty=] and Kima run into him in season 3, Santangelo admits that he actually is a lot happier as a patrol officer, because he keeps the same pay and pension, is much better at the position than he was at being a detective, and doesn't have overbearing bosses like Rawls watching his every move. Santangelo's happiness in patrol leads [=McNulty=] to decide to join him and Carver on the Western District beat when he transfers out of the Major Crimes Unit.
* ''Series/StargateSG1'': In the episode "The Warrior", "K'tano" (actually the minor Goa'uld Imhotep disguised as a free Jaffa leader, using their ideology against him to gain his own army) sends Teal'c on a suicide mission against the System Lord Yu. Yu spares Teal'c, tells him Imhotep's true identity, and sends him back. Teal'c returns and kills Imhotep via KlingonPromotion.
** A rare positive variant concerns General Hammond. When he took over from General West, he initially seemed to be counting down his days to retirement in a dusty secret facility. Then the Stargate reactivated, putting Hammond on the track of becoming a ReasonableAuthorityFigure for much of the show's run.
* ''Series/StargateAtlantis'':
** The starting situation for Major John Sheppard: he screwed up in Afghanistan and was reassigned to [=McMurdo=] Station, Antarctica. Thing is, he not only turned out to be a fiendishly good pilot (he used a ''passenger helicopter'' to repeatedly dodge a ''drone weapon'')...
-->'''Carson''': ''(sees that Sheppard is sitting onto the Ancient control chair)'' Major, please don't!
-->'''John''': Come on Doc, what are the odds of me having the same gene as these guys?
-->''(the instant Sheppard touches the chair, it activates)''
-->'''Carson''': ''(astonished)'' ...quite slim, actually.
** Next thing he knows, he's being offered a chance by an extragalactic expedition's leader to tag along... Let's just say, this is how he became the series' resident ColonelBadass.
** In an AlternateUniverse, he's drummed out of the Air Force for the same stunt and ends up becoming a police detective in Las Vegas, spending much of his time drinking and gambling. Long story short, he ends up saving the planet [[spoiler:by making a HeroicSacrifice]].
** Rodney [=McKay=] was by and large a complete {{jerkass}} in his appearances in SG-1. He had ''already'' been ReassignedToAntarctica (literally) when the Atlantis expedition was authorized, which then reassigned him even ''further'' away. However, Atlantis saw him teamed up with a RagtagBunchOfMisfits and subject to lengthy CharacterDevelopment, meaning that his punishment actually ended up being extremely good for everyone involved.
* ''Series/TheXFiles'': Scully was pulled out of being a professor at Quantico to debunk Mulder's work on the X-Files, to get it shut down so he couldn't find the Truth. This backfired massively when she is not only unable to debunk his work, but starts siding with him and becomes part of the X-Files herself. Plus, falling in love with your partner and [[spoiler: having a child with him]] adds to that.
* In ''[[Recap/SharpeS3E2SharpesBattle Sharpe's Battle]]'' of the ''Series/{{Sharpe}}'' TV series, a company of Irish guard are recruited into the British army, and the high command decides to send them to a far outpost on the edge of the front lines, in a terrible position, so they'll all desert and solve the problem of having to deal with a company that doesn't like England- then sends Richard Sharpe to whip them into place, expecting him to drive them off for good. He makes them crack soldiers instead and decimates an entire enemy brigade. Oops.
* ''Series/{{NCIS}}'' had a Navy officer, Evan Dearing, being reassigned to a battleship after he violated procedures by videotaping a fellow soldier having sex and showing it to various personnel as a prank, alongside two friends of his. Said ship ends up being destroyed in a terrorist attack, resulting in Evan's death, as well as a very angry Harper Dearing, Evan's father.
* The ''Series/CriminalMinds'' episode ''Legacy'' features a Detective [=McGee=] of the Kansas City Police Department. His OCD makes him seem [[DefectiveDetective unstable]], but his superiors feel that they can't fire him, because his dad was [[TheCaptain the captain's]] partner and was killed on the job. Instead they [[KickedUpstairs promote him to detective]] so that they can keep him away from the general public by assigning him to the downtown area to keep an eye on the homeless, the prostitutes and the drug users. Then, of course, his compulsion to catalogue everyone he encounters on the streets causes him to notice when 63 of them just aren't there anymore, and thus he discovers a SerialKiller who kills [[DisposableVagrant society's]] [[DisposableSexWorker castoffs]].
* ''Franchise/StarTrek'':
** ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'': In his debut episode "[[{{Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS3E21HollowPursuits}} Hollow Pursuits]]", Lt. Reginald "Reg" Barclay was thought to have been transferred to the ''Enterprise'' [[KickedUpstairs just to get rid of him]]. However, throughout the series, Barclay came into his own as a Starfleet officer under [[ReasonableAuthorityFigure Picard]]'s command.
** ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'':
*** A case where a character tried to do this to ''himself'' occurs when Commander Sisko, distraught over the loss of his wife takes assignments near Earth in order to ride out his time in Starfleet. He is reassigned to [=DS9=] despite his protests that it's not the "ideal environment" in which to raise his son. [=DS9=] is a wreck of a halfway abandoned space station near an unimportant planet. Then they discover a stable wormhole nearby, the aliens inside declare him as their Emissary, and that station becomes one of the most important field assignments in Starfleet.
*** Kira Nerys, whom the Provisional Government sent to Deep Space Nine just so she'd be less likely to yell at them over every little matter (no luck, Kira's introduced yelling at her superior over the comm.). As a result, she becomes the second officer to the Emissary himself, and a major player in all the events that follow over the next seven years, including the election of the next First Minister of Bajor.
*** Gul Dukat, who because of a political scandal was demoted from top military advisor to his government to commanding a mere freighter, managed to earn back his position after a brilliant capture of an enemy ship. He turned down the position and decided to go rogue, only to eventually [[spoiler: stage a Dominion-backed coup to become supreme dictator of his homeworld.]]
*** Quark considered his bar an embarrassment, and would have abandoned it by the pilot had Sisko not blackmailed him into staying. Not long after, he was praised for his lobes in finding such a profitable location without even knowing the wormhole was there at the time.
*** Not to mention Rom, who wound up working for his brother after losing everything, [[spoiler: and finished up becoming the Grand Nagus.]]
* An interesting case concerning ''Series/PowerRangersSPD''. After discovering SPD's elite team, A Squad, Cruger decides to end B Squad's tenure as protectors and returns them to A Squad pick up duty again. Then, A Squad [[FaceHeelTurn ended up being evil]] and B Squad had to save the day.

to:

* ''Series/TheWire'':
** In the first season, a RagtagBunchOfMisfits is put on a deadend assignment. They ([[TheRemnant mostly]]) succeed in taking down the biggest drug empire in West Baltimore.
** By the start of Season 2, [[CowboyCop McNulty]] has been put in his nightmare assignment of harbour patrol, and manages to blow open a human trafficking operation. In a variation on the usual trope, this isn't so much out of irrepressible heroism as it is [[InvokedTrope a calculated attempt to embarrass his old boss]]. He's already so low on the career ladder that [[DaChief Rawls]] can't do anything meaningful in retaliation anyway.
** Prez gets [[PoliceBrutality justifiably stripped of his gun]] and stuck on a desk. Turns out his intelligence and skill at pattern-recognition mean he's much more effective as a DeskJockey than he was as a beat cop.
** Michael Santangelo is a somewhat incompetent Homicide detective who is assigned by Rawls to the Barksdale detail, ostensibly to spy on [=McNulty=]. When Bunk and [=McNulty=] help him out of a jam, Santangelo refuses to rat on a fellow officer, and thus takes a demotion to a patrol officer in the Western District. When [=McNulty=] and Kima run into him in season 3, Santangelo admits that he actually is a lot happier as a patrol officer, because he keeps the same pay and pension, is much better at the position than he was at being a detective, and doesn't have overbearing bosses like Rawls watching his every move. Santangelo's happiness in patrol leads [=McNulty=] to decide to join him and Carver on the Western District beat when he transfers out of the Major Crimes Unit.
* ''Series/StargateSG1'': In the episode "The Warrior", "K'tano" (actually the minor Goa'uld Imhotep disguised as a free Jaffa leader, using their ideology against him to gain his own army) sends Teal'c on a suicide mission against the System Lord Yu. Yu spares Teal'c, tells him Imhotep's true identity, and sends him back. Teal'c returns and kills Imhotep via KlingonPromotion.
** A rare positive variant concerns General Hammond. When he took over from General West, he initially seemed to be counting down his days to retirement in a dusty secret facility. Then the Stargate reactivated, putting Hammond on the track of becoming a ReasonableAuthorityFigure for much of the show's run.
* ''Series/StargateAtlantis'':
** The starting situation for Major John Sheppard: he screwed up in Afghanistan and was reassigned to [=McMurdo=] Station, Antarctica. Thing is, he not only turned out to be a fiendishly good pilot (he used a ''passenger helicopter'' to repeatedly dodge a ''drone weapon'')...
-->'''Carson''': ''(sees that Sheppard is sitting onto the Ancient control chair)'' Major, please don't!
-->'''John''': Come on Doc, what are the odds of me having the same gene as these guys?
-->''(the instant Sheppard touches the chair, it activates)''
-->'''Carson''': ''(astonished)'' ...quite slim, actually.
** Next thing he knows, he's being offered a chance by an extragalactic expedition's leader to tag along... Let's just say, this is how he became the series' resident ColonelBadass.
** In an AlternateUniverse, he's drummed out of the Air Force for the same stunt and ends up becoming a police detective in Las Vegas, spending much of his time drinking and gambling. Long story short, he ends up saving the planet [[spoiler:by making a HeroicSacrifice]].
** Rodney [=McKay=] was by and large a complete {{jerkass}} in his appearances in SG-1. He had ''already'' been ReassignedToAntarctica (literally) when the Atlantis expedition was authorized, which then reassigned him even ''further'' away. However, Atlantis saw him teamed up with a RagtagBunchOfMisfits and subject to lengthy CharacterDevelopment, meaning that his punishment actually ended up being extremely good for everyone involved.
* ''Series/TheXFiles'': Scully was pulled out of being a professor at Quantico to debunk Mulder's work on the X-Files, to get it shut down so he couldn't find the Truth. This backfired massively when she is not only unable to debunk his work, but starts siding with him and becomes part of the X-Files herself. Plus, falling in love with your partner and [[spoiler: having a child with him]] adds to that.
* In ''[[Recap/SharpeS3E2SharpesBattle Sharpe's Battle]]'' of the ''Series/{{Sharpe}}'' TV series, a company of Irish guard are recruited into the British army, and the high command decides to send them to a far outpost on the edge of the front lines, in a terrible position, so they'll all desert and solve the problem of having to deal with a company that doesn't like England- then sends Richard Sharpe to whip them into place, expecting him to drive them off for good. He makes them crack soldiers instead and decimates an entire enemy brigade. Oops.
* ''Series/{{NCIS}}'' had a Navy officer, Evan Dearing, being reassigned to a battleship after he violated procedures by videotaping a fellow soldier having sex and showing it to various personnel as a prank, alongside two friends of his. Said ship ends up being destroyed in a terrorist attack, resulting in Evan's death, as well as a very angry Harper Dearing, Evan's father.
* The ''Series/CriminalMinds'' episode ''Legacy'' "[[Recap/CriminalMindsS2E22Legacy Legacy]]" features a Detective [=McGee=] of the Kansas City Police Department. His OCD makes him seem [[DefectiveDetective unstable]], but his superiors feel that they can't fire him, because his dad was [[TheCaptain the captain's]] partner and was killed on the job. Instead Instead, they [[KickedUpstairs promote him to detective]] so that they can keep him away from the general public by assigning him to the downtown area to keep an eye on the homeless, the prostitutes and the drug users. Then, of course, his compulsion to catalogue everyone he encounters on the streets causes him to notice when 63 of them just aren't there anymore, and thus he discovers a SerialKiller who [[KillThePoor kills [[DisposableVagrant society's]] [[DisposableSexWorker society's castoffs]].
* ''Franchise/StarTrek'':
** ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'':
In his debut episode "[[{{Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS3E21HollowPursuits}} Hollow Pursuits]]", Lt. Reginald "Reg" Barclay ''Series/DesignatedSurvivor'', HUD Secretary Tom Kirkman was thought to have been transferred to named the ''Enterprise'' [[KickedUpstairs just [[TitleDrop Designated Survivor]] to get rid of him]]. However, throughout the series, Barclay came into his own as a Starfleet officer under [[ReasonableAuthorityFigure Picard]]'s command.
** ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'':
*** A case where a character tried to do this to ''himself'' occurs when Commander Sisko, distraught over the loss of his wife takes assignments near Earth in order to ride
keep him out his time in Starfleet. He is reassigned to [=DS9=] despite his protests that it's not the "ideal environment" in which to raise his son. [=DS9=] is a wreck of a halfway abandoned space station near an unimportant planet. Then they discover a stable wormhole nearby, the aliens inside declare him as their Emissary, and that station becomes one of the most important field assignments in Starfleet.
*** Kira Nerys, whom
way during the Provisional Government sent to Deep Space Nine just so she'd be less likely to yell at them over every little matter (no luck, Kira's introduced yelling at her superior over the comm.). As a result, she becomes the second officer to the Emissary himself, and a major player in all the events that follow over the next seven years, including the election State of the next First Minister of Bajor.
*** Gul Dukat, who
Union Speech (since the President was going to fire him soon) [[spoiler:and also because a conspiracy considered him the ''least'' prepared member of a political scandal was demoted from top military advisor to his the government to commanding take its reins]]. During the speech, a mere freighter, managed terrorist attack takes out the half of the Capitol, killing the Government, all of the House of Representatives (bar one [[spoiler:who is involved in the conspiracy]]), all of the Senate (save for the Republican Party's Designated Survivor), all of the Supreme Court and pretty much anyone else with power in Washington D.C. -- which leaves Kirkman as the new President of the United States.
* ''Series/DoctorWho'': "[[Recap/DoctorWho20thASTheFiveDoctors The Five Doctors]]" subverts this when [[spoiler:the Doctor is made President of Gallifrey in the hopes of tying him
to earn back his position after a brilliant capture of an enemy ship. He turned down the position and decided halting his endless gallivanting across time and space -- instead of coming quietly to go rogue, rule from behind a desk, he gives an order placing the one who promoted him in command until his return and dashes off in the TARDIS with no intention of returning. He finally shows an interest in the post in "Trial of a Time Lord" when he tries to play the 'Presidential immunity from prosecution card', only to eventually [[spoiler: stage a Dominion-backed coup to become supreme dictator of find out that he had been deposed during his homeworld.]]
*** Quark considered
absence for neglecting his bar an embarrassment, duties]].
* Played with in ''Series/DueSouth'': Fraser was assigned liaison duty with the Canadian Consulate in Chicago as retribution for arresting a fellow Mountie --
and would have abandoned it by for being, in general, just a little ''too good'' for anyone at home to feel really comfortable with. He becomes something of a local phenomenon in Chicago, but remains ''persona non grata'' at home, and the pilot had Sisko not blackmailed him into staying. Not long after, he was praised Consulate continues to function as an apparent dumping ground for his lobes in finding such a profitable location without even knowing the wormhole was there misfits.
* ''Series/TheDustbinmen'': The management
at the time.
*** Not
dustman depot decide to mention Rom, who wound up working "draw the teeth" of the militant "Cheese-&-Egg" by promoting to Depot Manager;it backfires spectacularly when his dictatorial high-handedness provokes an all-out strike; he gets demoted back down to dustman and thanks his old crew for bringing him back to his brother senses.
* Captain Parmenter from ''Series/FTroop'' was KickedUpstairs to a command position at Fort Courage
after losing everything, [[spoiler: and finished up becoming his {{accidental hero}}ism at the Grand Nagus.]]
* An interesting case concerning ''Series/PowerRangersSPD''. After discovering SPD's elite team, A Squad, Cruger decides
Battle of Appomatox caused some embarrassment to end B Squad's tenure as protectors and returns them to A Squad pick up duty again. Then, A Squad [[FaceHeelTurn ended up being evil]] and B Squad had to save the day.U.S. Army.



* Averted in an episode of ''Series/LouGrant''. For violating a newspaper policy, reporter Joe Rossi is assigned to the dullest story Lou can think of -- profiling a minor state official, who commutes between Los Angeles and Sacramento (he even admits to his subject that he's being punished). But then Rossi discovers that the official is a bigamist, with a family in each city...and gloats that his story is "going to write itself." But in the end, he can't bring himself to ruin two families' lives, and instead turns in a story which Lou dismisses as drivel.
* In ''Series/DesignatedSurvivor'', [=HUD=] Secretary Tom Kirkman was named the [[TitleDrop Designated Survivor]] to keep him out of the way during the State of the Union Speech (since the President was going to fire him soon) [[spoiler:and also because a conspiracy considered him the ''least'' prepared member of the government to take its reins]]. During the speech, a terrorist attack takes out the half of the Capitol, killing the Government, all of the House of Representatives (bar one [[spoiler:who is involved in the conspiracy]]), all of the Senate (save for the Republican Party's Designated Survivor), all of the Supreme Court and pretty much anyone else with power in Washington D.C. - which leaves Kirkman as the new President of the United States.

to:

* Averted Happens in ''Series/TheGreatestAmericanHero'' when Bill Maxwell's boss, exasperated with his loss of government cars, assigns him a Volkswagen bug and the case of a missing circus clown. It leads to him busting a major spy ring. The bad guy even tells Bill he'll get a promotion out of the case.
* Subverted
in an episode of ''Series/LouGrant''. For violating a newspaper policy, reporter Joe Rossi is assigned to the dullest story Lou can think of -- profiling a minor state official, who commutes between Los Angeles and Sacramento (he even admits to his subject that he's being punished). But then Then Rossi discovers that the official is a bigamist, with a family in each city...city... and gloats that his story is "going to write itself." But itself". However, in the end, he can't bring himself to ruin two families' lives, and instead turns in a story which Lou dismisses as drivel.
* ''Series/{{MASH}}'':
** Subverted in "[[Recap/MashS6E1FadeOutFadeIn Fade Out, Fade In]]". Charles is sent to the 4077th by a higher officer who owes him money. Shortly after his arrival, he is able to prove that his surgical skills are invaluable, ensuring that he becomes the permanent tentmate of Hawkeye and BJ (much to his chagrin).
** Played straight a few seasons later when the higher officer comes back. Because of a sequence of events that would lead to trouble, he expects Winchester to cover for him so that Margaret's career would be ruined and his career would be fine, with a reward of finally going back to Tokyo. Due to CharacterDevelopment making him turn from a {{Jerkass}} to a JerkWithAHeartOfGold, Winchester has enough morals to loudly call him on it.
* ''Series/{{NCIS}}'' has a Navy officer, Evan Dearing, being reassigned to a battleship after he violates procedures by videotaping a fellow soldier having sex and showing it to various personnel as a prank, alongside two friends of his. Said ship ends up being destroyed in a terrorist attack, resulting in Evan's death, as well as a very angry Harper Dearing, Evan's father.
* An interesting case concerning ''Series/PowerRangersSPD''. After discovering SPD's elite team, A Squad, Cruger decides to end B Squad's tenure as protectors and returns them to A Squad pick up duty again. Then, A Squad [[FaceHeelTurn ended up being evil]] and B Squad had to save the day.
* ''Series/{{Sharpe}}'':
In ''Series/DesignatedSurvivor'', [=HUD=] Secretary Tom Kirkman "[[Recap/SharpeS3E2SharpesBattle Sharpe's Battle]]", a company of Irish guard are recruited into the British army, and the high command decides to send them to a far outpost on the edge of the front lines, in a terrible position, so they'll all desert and solve the problem of having to deal with a company that doesn't like England -- then sends Richard Sharpe to whip them into place, expecting him to drive them off for good. He makes them crack soldiers instead and decimates an entire enemy brigade. Oops.
* ''Franchise/StargateVerse'':
** ''Series/StargateSG1'':
*** In the episode "[[Recap/StargateSG1S5E18TheWarrior The Warrior]]", "K'tano" (actually the minor Goa'uld Imhotep disguised as a free Jaffa leader, using their ideology against him to gain his own army) sends Teal'c on a suicide mission against the System Lord Yu. Yu spares Teal'c, tells him Imhotep's true identity, and sends him back. Teal'c returns and kills Imhotep via KlingonPromotion.
*** A rare positive variant concerns General Hammond. When he took over from General West, he initially seemed to be counting down his days to retirement in a dusty secret facility. Then the Stargate reactivated, putting Hammond on the track of becoming a ReasonableAuthorityFigure for much of the show's run.
** ''Series/StargateAtlantis'':
*** The starting situation for Major John Sheppard: he screwed up in Afghanistan and
was named reassigned to [=McMurdo=] Station, Antarctica. Thing is, he not only turned out to be a fiendishly good pilot (he used a ''passenger helicopter'' to repeatedly dodge a ''drone weapon'')...
---->'''Carson:''' ''[sees that Sheppard is sitting onto
the [[TitleDrop Designated Survivor]] Ancient control chair]'' Major, please don't!\\
'''John:''' Come on, Doc, what are the odds of me having the same gene as these guys?\\
''[the instant Sheppard touches the chair, it activates]''\\
'''Carson:''' ''[astonished]'' ...Quite slim, actually.
*** The next thing he knows, he's being offered a chance by an extragalactic expedition's leader
to keep him tag along... Let's just say, this is how he became the series' resident ColonelBadass.
*** In an AlternateUniverse, he's drummed
out of the way during Air Force for the State same stunt and ends up becoming a police detective in Las Vegas, spending much of his time drinking and gambling. Long story short, he ends up saving the planet [[spoiler:by making a HeroicSacrifice]].
*** Rodney [=McKay=] is by and large a complete {{Jerkass}} in his appearances in ''SG-1''. He had ''already'' been ReassignedToAntarctica (literally) when the Atlantis expedition was authorized, which then reassigned him even ''further'' away. However, ''Atlantis'' sees him teamed up with a RagtagBunchOfMisfits and subject to lengthy CharacterDevelopment, meaning that his punishment actually ends up being extremely good for everyone involved.
* ''Franchise/StarTrek'':
** ''Series/StarTrekTheNextGeneration'': In his debut episode "[[Recap/StarTrekTheNextGenerationS3E21HollowPursuits Hollow Pursuits]]", Lt. Reginald "Reg" Barclay was thought to have been transferred to the ''Enterprise'' [[KickedUpstairs just to get rid of him]]. However, throughout the series, Barclay came into his own as a Starfleet officer under [[ReasonableAuthorityFigure Picard]]'s command.
** ''Series/StarTrekDeepSpaceNine'':
*** A case of a character trying to do this to ''himself'' occurs when Commander Sisko, distraught over the loss of his wife takes assignments near Earth in order to ride out his time in Starfleet. He is reassigned to [=DS9=] despite his protests that it's not the "ideal environment" in which to raise his son. [=DS9=] is a wreck of a halfway abandoned space station near an unimportant planet. Then they discover a stable wormhole nearby, the aliens inside declare him as their Emissary, and that station becomes one
of the Union Speech (since most important field assignments in Starfleet.
*** Kira Nerys, whom
the President Provisional Government sent to Deep Space Nine just so she'd be less likely to yell at them over every little matter (no luck, Kira's introduced yelling at her superior over the comm.). As a result, she becomes the second officer to the Emissary himself, and a major player in all the events that follow over the next seven years, including the election of the next First Minister of Bajor.
*** Gul Dukat, who because of a political scandal
was going demoted from top military advisor to fire his government to commanding a mere freighter, managed to earn back his position after a brilliant capture of an enemy ship. He turned down the position and decided to go rogue, only to eventually [[spoiler:stage a Dominion-backed coup to become supreme dictator of his homeworld]].
*** Quark considered his bar an embarrassment, and would have abandoned it by the pilot had Sisko not blackmailed
him soon) into staying. Not long after, he was praised for his lobes in finding such a profitable location without even knowing the wormhole was there at the time.
*** Not to mention Rom, who wound up working for his brother after losing everything,
[[spoiler:and also finished up becoming the Grand Nagus]].
* ''Series/TheWire'':
** In the first season, a RagtagBunchOfMisfits is put on a deadend assignment. They ([[TheRemnant mostly]]) succeed in taking down the biggest drug empire in West Baltimore.
** By the start of Season 2, [[CowboyCop McNulty]] has been put in his nightmare assignment of harbour patrol, and manages to blow open a human trafficking operation. In a variation on the usual trope, this isn't so much out of irrepressible heroism as it is [[InvokedTrope a calculated attempt to embarrass his old boss]]. He's already so low on the career ladder that [[DaChief Rawls]] can't do anything meaningful in retaliation anyway.
** Prez gets [[PoliceBrutality justifiably stripped of his gun]] and stuck on a desk. Turns out his intelligence and skill at pattern-recognition mean he's much more effective as a DeskJockey than he was as a beat cop.
** Michael Santangelo is a somewhat incompetent Homicide detective who is assigned by Rawls to the Barksdale detail, ostensibly to spy on [=McNulty=]. When Bunk and [=McNulty=] help him out of a jam, Santangelo refuses to rat on a fellow officer, and thus takes a demotion to a patrol officer in the Western District. When [=McNulty=] and Kima run into him in season 3, Santangelo admits that he actually is a lot happier as a patrol officer,
because he keeps the same pay and pension, is much better at the position than he was at being a conspiracy considered detective, and doesn't have overbearing bosses like Rawls watching his every move. Santangelo's happiness in patrol leads [=McNulty=] to decide to join him and Carver on the ''least'' prepared member Western District beat when he transfers out of the government Major Crimes Unit.
* ''Series/TheXFiles'': Scully was pulled out of being a professor at Quantico
to take its reins]]. During debunk Mulder's work on the speech, a terrorist attack takes out X-Files, to get it shut down so he couldn't find the half Truth. This backfired massively when she is not only unable to debunk his work, but starts siding with him and becomes part of the Capitol, killing the Government, all of the House of Representatives (bar one [[spoiler:who is involved X-Files herself. Plus, falling in the conspiracy]]), all of the Senate (save for the Republican Party's Designated Survivor), all of the Supreme Court and pretty much anyone else love with power in Washington D.C. - which leaves Kirkman as the new President of the United States.your partner and [[spoiler:having a child with him]] adds to that.



* In ''TabletopGame/{{Exalted}}'', the Realm's Vermilion Legion is composed of drunks, petty criminals and surplus younger sons. Tepet Ejava, one of the Realm's most formidable military commanders and a candidate for the Scarlet Throne, was given command of them and sent off to get killed in the constant low-level violence in the Southeast. Of course, she's managed to turn the Legion into a crack unit and a serious power base. Oops.
** Didn't hurt Ejava's efforts that the so-called "Red-Piss Legion", being the [[RagtagBunchOfMisfits Ragtag Legion of Misfits]] that it is, remains immune to the nepotism and favortism of the other Legions and actually rewards merit and skill (the rewards starting with, "you can avoid being killed by the A-1 psychos the Vermillions have to fight").
** The pro-Solar Golden Faction of the Sidereals found themselves being reassigned to conventions of the Wood - the wildest regions filled with powerful, uncontrolled Essence users - and the Convention on Essence Users in general, which was more of the same. When the Solars actually came back, this put the Golden Faction in a prime position to hide and train them.
* During the Second War for Armageddon in the background for ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'', the corrupt Planetary Governor Herman von Strab reassigned [[PoliticalOfficer Commissar]] Sebastian Yarrick to [[MegaCity Hades Hive]] as a punishment for going over his head and requesting reinforcements from the Imperium. Unfortunately for the incompetent and traitorous Governor, rather than dying as he had hoped Yarrick was put into the perfect position to stall the [[OurOrcsAreDifferent Ork]] advance and become the famous Hero of Hades Hive.
** This is actually a double-layered backfire - the only reason Yarrick was on Armageddon at all was because some political enemies had pulled strings with the Commissariat to get him pulled from field assignments and banished to a recruitment/basic training facility to mark time until retirement. Then Thraka arrived and Yarrick found himself on the front lines of a major war anyway.

to:

* In ''TabletopGame/{{Exalted}}'', the ''TabletopGame/{{Exalted}}'':
** The
Realm's Vermilion Legion is composed of drunks, petty criminals and surplus younger sons. Tepet Ejava, one of the Realm's most formidable military commanders and a candidate for the Scarlet Throne, was given command of them and sent off to get killed in the constant low-level violence in the Southeast. Of course, she's managed to turn the Legion into a crack unit and a serious power base. Oops.
** Didn't
Oops. It didn't hurt Ejava's efforts that the so-called "Red-Piss Legion", being the [[RagtagBunchOfMisfits Ragtag Legion of Misfits]] that it is, remains immune to the nepotism and favortism of the other Legions and actually rewards merit and skill (the rewards starting with, "you can avoid being killed by the A-1 psychos the Vermillions have to fight").
** The pro-Solar Golden Faction of the Sidereals found themselves being reassigned to conventions of the Wood - -- the wildest regions filled with powerful, uncontrolled Essence users - -- and the Convention on Essence Users in general, which was more of the same. When the Solars actually came back, this put the Golden Faction in a prime position to hide and train them.
* During the Second War for Armageddon in the background for ''TabletopGame/Warhammer40000'', the corrupt Planetary Governor Herman von Strab reassigned [[PoliticalOfficer [[ThePoliticalOfficer Commissar]] Sebastian Yarrick to [[MegaCity Hades Hive]] as a punishment for going over his head and requesting reinforcements from the Imperium. Unfortunately for the incompetent and traitorous Governor, rather than dying as he had hoped Yarrick was put into the perfect position to stall the [[OurOrcsAreDifferent Ork]] advance and become the famous Hero of Hades Hive. \n** This is actually a double-layered backfire - -- the only reason Yarrick was on Armageddon at all was because some political enemies had pulled strings with the Commissariat to get him pulled from field assignments and banished to a recruitment/basic training facility to mark time until retirement. Then Thraka arrived and Yarrick found himself on the front lines of a major war anyway.
anyway.



Series, The Dustbinmen.
The management at the dustman depot decide to "draw the teeth" of the militant "Cheese-&-Egg" by promoting to Depot Manager;it backfires spectacularly when his dictatorial high-handedness provokes an all-out strike; he gets demoted back down to dustman and thanks his old crew for bringing him back to his senses.



* ''VideoGame/WingCommander'':
** In the intro to ''Wing Commander II'', Christopher Blair is accused of treason. There's no solid evidence against him, so the court martial only convicts him of negligence and demotes him, but Admiral Tolwyn remains convinced he's a traitor and reassigns him to a little backwater station. Ten years later he encounters the [[ProudWarriorRace Kilrathi]] in the area and is forced to save the day, soon becoming the hero of another major campaign.
** In ''Wing Commander III'', he's given another crappy assignment by the same admiral. This time, however, Tolwyn deliberately assigned him to an unimpressive carrier so that when the time came, he could use Blair in his plan to end the war without drawing too much attention from the enemy.
** The true Reassignment Backfire occurs in ''Wing Commander IV'' when [[spoiler: Blair gets involved in going rogue to fight a conspiracy that turns out to be run by Tolwyn himself. He ends up exposing his eugenics plans and gets him convicted for treason.]]
* [[AllThereInTheManual According to the help file]] included with the registered version of ''VideoGame/{{Doom}}'', the Marine was relocated to Mars, a backwater dustball whose only notable features were scientific outposts on its moons, in lieu of a court-martial for striking a commanding officer who had ordered him to fire on civilians. No, they '''didn't''' just make that up for the novel. He, of course, went on to save the world from the forces of Hell over the course of two games. [[spoiler:And, as revealed by ''VideoGame/DoomEternal'', would go on to wage war against Hell for ''millennia''.]]

to:

* ''VideoGame/WingCommander'':
''VideoGame/AceCombat7SkiesUnknown'':
** In [[PlayerCharacter Trigger]] is transferred to the intro to ''Wing Commander II'', Christopher Blair is accused of treason. There's no solid evidence against him, so Spare Squadron by Osea High Command [[spoiler:after aledgedly getting former president Harling killed during a skirmish]], under the court martial only convicts him assumption that he'll be killed in a suicide mission. Instead, Trigger becomes one of negligence Osea's best pilots after surviving an engagement with the Erusean Ace Mihaly, and demotes him, but Admiral Tolwyn remains convinced he's a traitor and reassigns him to a little backwater station. Ten years later he encounters becomes instrumental in ending the [[ProudWarriorRace Kilrathi]] war.
** The Spare Squadron is a unit
in the area Osean Air Defense Force made up of criminals who were meant to be used as cannon fodder to soften up occupying Erusean forces so that the regular military can mop up the rest, and is forced to save the day, soon becoming the hero of another major campaign.
** In ''Wing Commander III'', he's given another crappy assignment by the same admiral. This time, however, Tolwyn deliberately
probe for holes in Erusea's drone network. When Trigger gets assigned to them, they end up proving to be SurprisinglyEliteCannonFodder, so the squadron is disbanded, and the pilots are reassigned to the regular forces.
* ''VideoGame/BlazBlueContinuumShift'' toys with this trope a bit. Hazama, in a bid to freely MindRape Noel and Tsubaki, sends his (competent) lieutenant Makoto to the NOL branch in Ibukido as a way to keep her away from her close friends (the aforementioned Noel and Tsubaki). This crosses as a UriahGambit as, while he expected her career to dead-end long enough to let
him to an unimpressive carrier so that when do with them as he pleases, having her choke on seithr or get timefucked by the time came, he local cauldron works, too. While there are no accolades or desired reallocations to the 5th Hierarchical City in the wake of her work, to say the whole thing backfired fails to adequately describe how ''bad'' an idea this was in hindsight. Not only did this fail to kill Makoto, but she [[spoiler:fell into an alternate timeline and witnessed events which she could use Blair to abort or reverse Tsubaki's intended [[FaceHeelTurn change in alignment]]; acted with the interest of her friends first and foremost, which flies in the face of Terumi's ideal of despair, proceeding to [[SpannerInTheWorks balls up his plan to end plans]] as collateral damage; made friends with the war without drawing too much attention from "shitty vampire" Rachel Alucard and returned to her origin timeline; and learned the enemy.
** The true Reassignment Backfire occurs in ''Wing Commander IV'' when [[spoiler: Blair gets involved in going rogue to fight a conspiracy that turns out to be run by Tolwyn himself. He ends up exposing his eugenics plans
truth about beastkin and gets him convicted Prime Field Devices like her best friend Noel]]. Long story short, Terumi's options for treason.]]
a permanent Makoto solution boil down to [[FateWorseThanDeath Relius]] or [[JustShootHim homicide]]; she's capable of adapting to, if not already resilient to, ''just about everything else''.
* [[AllThereInTheManual According to the help file]] included with the registered version of ''VideoGame/{{Doom}}'', the Marine was relocated to Mars, a backwater dustball whose only notable features were scientific outposts on its moons, in lieu of a court-martial for striking a commanding officer who had ordered him to fire on civilians. No, they '''didn't''' just make that up for the novel. He, of course, went on to save the world from the forces of Hell over the course of two games. [[spoiler:And, games [[spoiler:and, as revealed by ''VideoGame/DoomEternal'', would go on to wage war against Hell for ''millennia''.''millennia'']].
* ''VideoGame/LANoire'': The result of reassigning [[spoiler:Cole Phelps]] to [[ReassignedToAntarctica the police department's version of Antarctica]] is a backfire of ''epic'' proportions. In trying to move public scrutiny away from Vice by giving the media a new ChewToy, they put [[spoiler:Cole ''directly'' on the scent of their [[TheConspiracy conspiracy]]]]. Whoops. NiceJobFixingItVillain.
* ''VideoGame/LuminousArc'' plays with this a bit. Kingston created the Garden Children idea to [[ReassignedToAntarctica get Heath out of the way when he started asking too many questions]], on the premise of creating a crack squad of [[TykeBomb orphans raised to be excellent soldiers]]. [[spoiler:Here's where it starts to zigzag. Kingston got exactly what he asked for -- a group of highly proficient soldiers who work very well together, and thanks to Heath being incredibly zealous to try and get back in the good books and keep sniffing around, they're completely loyal to him and his ideal. He then proceeds to reassign Heath again and Sends the Fatal Hounds on a wild goose chase to get them out of his hair, giving them time to defect and become a very sharp thorn in his side. If he'd kept them on a tighter leash and used them as an actual strategic asset, he would have won.
]]



** In ''VideoGame/MassEffect2'', Tali is reassigned to the ''[[CoolStarship Normandy]]'' when she is [[spoiler: on trial for treason]] because the ObstructiveBureaucrat on the Admiralty Board wants her exiled from the Migrant Fleet and thinks that Commander Shepard will be a poor advocate for her. As part of this, they have Tali officially renamed to "Tali'zorah vas Normandy": by making her ship name that of Shepard's ship, they essentially send the message that Tali is all but exiled at that point [[spoiler:and the trial is simply a formality]]. That does not go according to plan (unless Shepard is a poor diplomat). After which, feeling that Shepard has been a greater friend to her than any quarian, [[UndyingLoyalty she decides to remain "vas Normandy" permanently]].
* ''VideoGame/LuminousArc'' plays with this a bit. Kingston created the Garden Children idea to [[ReassignedToAntarctica get Heath out of the way when he started asking too many questions]], on the premise of creating a crack squad of [[TykeBomb orphans raised to be excellent soldiers]]. [[spoiler: Here's where it starts to zigzag. Kingston got exactly what he asked for -- a group of highly proficient soldiers who work very well together, and thanks to Heath being incredibly zealous to try and get back in the good books and keep sniffing around, they're completely loyal to him and his ideal. He then proceeds to reassign Heath again and Sends the Fatal Hounds on a wild goose chase to get them out of his hair, giving them time to defect and become a very sharp thorn in his side. If he'd kept them on a tighter leash and used them as an actual strategic asset, he would have won.]]
* ''VideoGame/LANoire'': The result of reassigning [[spoiler:Cole Phelps]] to [[ReassignedToAntarctica the police department's version of Antarctica]] is a backfire of ''epic'' proportions. In trying to move public scrutiny away from Vice by giving the media a new ChewToy, they put [[spoiler:Cole ''directly'' on the scent of their [[TheConspiracy conspiracy]]]]. Whoops. NiceJobFixingItVillain.

to:

** In ''VideoGame/MassEffect2'', Tali is reassigned to the ''[[CoolStarship Normandy]]'' when she is [[spoiler: on [[spoiler:on trial for treason]] because the ObstructiveBureaucrat on the Admiralty Board wants her exiled from the Migrant Fleet and thinks that Commander Shepard will be a poor advocate for her. As part of this, they have Tali officially renamed to "Tali'zorah vas Normandy": by making her ship name that of Shepard's ship, they essentially send the message that Tali is all but exiled at that point [[spoiler:and the trial is simply a formality]]. That does not go according to plan (unless Shepard is a poor diplomat). After which, feeling that Shepard has been a greater friend to her than any quarian, [[UndyingLoyalty she decides to remain "vas Normandy" permanently]].
* ''VideoGame/LuminousArc'' plays with this a bit. Kingston created ''VideoGame/MetalGear'':
** ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolidPeaceWalker'': Hot Coldman was assigned from
the Garden Children idea to [[ReassignedToAntarctica get Heath out director of the way when he started asking too many questions]], on CIA to the premise CIA Station Chief of creating a crack squad of [[TykeBomb orphans raised Central America because he orchestrated the Virtuous Mission and Operation Snake Eater and needed to be excellent soldiers]]. [[spoiler: Here's where it starts to zigzag. Kingston got exactly what he asked for -- a group of highly proficient soldiers who work very well together, and thanks to Heath being incredibly zealous to try and get back in the good books and keep sniffing around, they're completely loyal to him and his ideal. shut up. He then proceeds to reassign Heath again builds a small army known as the Peace Sentinels and Sends plans to create an AI-driven nuclear deterrent that can kill everyone. He almost destroys the Fatal Hounds world.
** ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolidVThePhantomPain'': Skull Face was one of The Patriots' best civilian-military operators until he grew resentful of Big Boss getting all the reputation and glory in the Patriots even after he quit. Zero reassigned him to Africa to look after his ethnic cleansing bioweapons, which caused the ethnicity-conscious hitman to snap, driving him to build a new form of portable Metal Gears which carried a very specific ethnic cleanser: [[spoiler:it kills anyone who constantly speaks English]].
* ''VideoGame/TheNewOrderLastDaysofEurope'': Hitler decides to put Himmler away in Burgundy so he wouldn't interfere nor gather political power to threaten him... and ended up giving him a place where he could consolidate his own sort of power, implement a government even the Nazis think is horrifying, and generally advance his plots, including [[spoiler:the part where he touches off the nuclear apocalypse
on purpose, so that the master race can live through it and reconquer the world]].
* Played with in ''VideoGame/SakuraWars''. The backwater post into which the talented rookie is forced despite complaints and obvious unsuitability? Yeah, there's
a wild goose chase catastrophe going on... and [[LockedOutOfTheLoop his superiors knew it all along]].
* In ''VideoGame/SuikodenIII'', Thomas is sent
to get them Budehuc Castle in order to keep him out of his hair, giving them time to defect scheming councilman father's way. When he turns the area into a thriving TruceZone, the Zexen Confederacy is less than pleased, and become a very sharp thorn in his side. If he'd kept them on a tighter leash and used them as an actual strategic asset, tries to force him to stop. Not only does he would have won.]]
* ''VideoGame/LANoire'': The result of reassigning [[spoiler:Cole Phelps]] to [[ReassignedToAntarctica
refuse, he winds up eventually providing the police department's version of Antarctica]] is a backfire of ''epic'' proportions. In trying to move public scrutiny away from Vice by giving the media a new ChewToy, they put [[spoiler:Cole ''directly'' on the scent of their [[TheConspiracy conspiracy]]]]. Whoops. NiceJobFixingItVillain.game's headquarters.



** ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsOriginalGeneration'': Kyosuke Nanbu is reassigned to North America's Langley Base after surviving the crash of the Wildraubiter's test flight at the Izu Far East Base. The person who reassigned him, Colonel Hans Weber, [[spoiler:is later revealed to be a [[TheMole Mole]] for the Divine Crusaders and caused the crash.]] After arriving in Langley, Kyosuke is placed on the [=ATX=] Team and eventually goes on to defeat the United Colony Corps with his new friends at Langley and aboard the Hiryu Kai. When he returns to Izu, Hans is not pleased at what Kyosuke has become. Later, when [[spoiler:Hans' treachery is revealed, he has to face Kyosuke and if the player feels like it, [[KarmicDeath can be killed by the very same pilot he got rid of to make his plans succeed]].]]
** ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsJudgment''[=/=]''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsW'': As per ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundamSEED Gundam SEED]]'''s plot, the casts of both games (well, part of the cast in ''Judgment''; the Alaska bit is one route split choice) get reassigned to the Joshua Base in Alaska by TheFederation, [[spoiler:hoping to get rid of them in an elaborate trap set to weaken [=ZAFT=]'s military using the [[NukeEm Cyclops System]] since the heroes are doing too well.]] Like in ''Gundam SEED'', [[spoiler:Mu La Flaga (another case of this trope) discovers the Cyclops System and warns everyone to get the Hell out of Dodge.]] The heroes eventually get back at TheFederation in a big way, particularly in W, where [[spoiler: one division of Neue Warter (aka the heroes) intercepts TheFederation's fleet on it's way to crush [=ZAFT=] using nuclear weapons to overpower them. And then they proceed to ''utterly destroy'' TheFederation's forces and kill the commander who left them to die in Alaska, [[Anime/TekkamanBlade General Colbert]].]]
** ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsW'': As mentioned above, the "Ms. Nadesico" contest from episode 19 of ''Anime/MartianSuccessorNadesico'' happens here, but plays out differently. [[spoiler:Baron Ashura, disguised as Professor Yumi (as per one episode from the Mazinkaiser [=OVA=]), gets caught up in the contest and after finding out what the contest is about, the Baron casts a vote hoping to sabotage Warter (aka the heroes). In spectacular backfire fashion, it is Ashura's vote that is the tie-breaker that gets Yurika back her old job.]]
** ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsAlpha 2'': [[Anime/MobileSuitGundam0083StardustMemory The crew of the Albion]] gets reassigned to a backwater post in space under the guise to protect the GP-02A Gundam "Physalis" (in reality, TheFederation wants nothing to do with them and wants the Albion's crew far away from them). Sadly, the GP-02A gets stolen and the Albion team joins up with the Alpha Numbers to get it back and go on to stop Nashim Gan Eden, among other threats to the Earth in that game. And then, the Albion's crew gets assigned to menial tasks again in Alpha 3 (partially due to a lot of Alpha 2's story getting retconned), and once again, they take to the field and help save the day from [[spoiler:Keiser Ephes, the Spirit Emperor]].
* In ''VideoGame/SuikodenIII'', Thomas is sent to Budehuc Castle in order to keep him out of his scheming councilman father's way. When he turns the area into a thriving TruceZone, the Zexen Confederacy is less than pleased, and tries to force him to stop. Not only does he refuse, he winds up eventually providing the game's headquarters.
* ''VideoGame/BlazBlueContinuumShift'' toys with this trope a bit. Hazama, in a bid to freely {{mindrape}} Noel and Tsubaki, sends his (competent) lieutenant Makoto to the NOL branch in Ibukido as a way to keep her away from her close friends (the aforementioned Noel and Tsubaki). This crosses as a UriahGambit as, while he expected her career to dead-end long enough to let him do with them as he pleases, having her choke on seithr or get timefucked by the local cauldron works, too. While there are no accolades or desired reallocations to the 5th Hierarchical City in the wake of her work, to say the whole thing backfired fails to adequately describe how ''bad'' an idea this was in hindsight. [[note]]Not only did this fail to kill Makoto, but she [[spoiler:fell into an alternate timeline and witnessed events which she could use to abort or reverse Tsubaki's intended [[FaceHeelTurn change in alignment]]; acted with the interest of her friends first and foremost, which flies in the face of Terumi's ideal of despair, proceeding to [[SpannerInTheWorks balls up his plans]] as collateral damage; made friends with the "shitty vampire" Rachel Alucard and returned to her origin timeline; and learned the truth about beastkin and Prime Field Devices like her best friend Noel.]] Long story short, Terumi's options for a permanent Makoto solution boil down to [[FateWorseThanDeath Relius]] or [[JustShootHim homicide]]; she's capable of adapting to, if not already resilient to, ''just about everything else''.[[/note]]
* ''[[VideoGame/UnrealIITheAwakening Unreal 2]]'' played with this. The player, Dalton, was kicked out of the Marines for disobeying the order to leave civilians to die, and has been trying to get back in since. In the mean time, the only work he can find is as a Marshal in the Terran Colonial Authority, policing "...the ass-end of space." Guess where the troubles start?
* Played with in ''VideoGame/SakuraWars''. The backwater post into which the talented rookie is forced despite complaints and obvious unsuitability? Yeah, there's a catastrophe going on... and [[LockedOutOfTheLoop his superiors knew it all along]].
* ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolidPeaceWalker'': Hot Coldman was assigned from the director of the CIA to the CIA Station Chief of Central America because he orchestrated the Virtuous Mission and Operation Snake Eater and needed to be shut up. He then builds a small army known as the Peace Sentinels and plans to create an AI-driven nuclear deterrent that can kill everyone. He almost destroys the world.
** ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolidVThePhantomPain'': Skull Face was one of The Patriots' best civilian-military operators until he grew resentful of Big Boss getting all the reputation and glory in the Patriots even after he quit. Zero reassigned him to Africa to look after his ethnic cleansing bioweapons, which caused the ethnicity-conscious hitman to snap, driving him to build a new form of portable Metal Gears which carried a very specific ethnic cleanser: [[spoiler:it kills anyone who constantly speaks English]].
* ''Videogame/TheNewOrderLastDaysOfEurope:'' Hitler decides to put Himmler away in Burgundy so he wouldn't interfere nor gather political power to threaten him... and ended up giving him a place where he could consolidate his own sort of power, implement a government even the Nazis think is horrifying, and generally advance his plots, including [[spoiler:the part where he touches off the nuclear apocalypse on purpose, so that the master race can live through it and reconquer the world]].
* ''VideoGame/AceCombat7SkiesUnknown''
** [[PlayerCharacter Trigger]] gets transferred to the Spare Squadron by Osea High Command [[spoiler:after aledgedly getting former president Harling killed during a skirmish]], under the assumption that he'll be killed in a suicide mission. Instead, Trigger becomes one of Osea's best pilots after surviving an engagement with the Erusean Ace Mihaly, and would become instrumental in ending the war.
** The Spare Squadron is a unit in the Osean Air Defense Force made up of criminals who were meant to be used as cannon fodder to soften up occupying Erusean forces so that the regular military can mop up the rest, and to probe for holes in Erusea's drone network. When Trigger gets assigned to them, they end up proving to be SurprisinglyEliteCannonFodder, so the squadron is disbanded, and the pilots get reassigned to the regular forces.

to:

** ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsOriginalGeneration'': In ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsOriginalGeneration'', Kyosuke Nanbu is reassigned to North America's Langley Base after surviving the crash of the Wildraubiter's test flight at the Izu Far East Base. The person who reassigned him, Colonel Hans Weber, [[spoiler:is later revealed to be a [[TheMole Mole]] for the Divine Crusaders and caused the crash.]] After arriving in Langley, Kyosuke is placed on the [=ATX=] ATX Team and eventually goes on to defeat the United Colony Corps with his new friends at Langley and aboard the Hiryu Kai. When he returns to Izu, Hans is not pleased at what Kyosuke has become. Later, when [[spoiler:Hans' treachery is revealed, he has to face Kyosuke and if the player feels like it, [[KarmicDeath can be killed by the very same pilot he got rid of to make his plans succeed]].]]
** ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsJudgment''[=/=]''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsW'': As per ''[[Anime/MobileSuitGundamSEED Gundam SEED]]'''s plot, the casts of both games ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsJudgment'' and ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsW'' (well, part of the cast in ''Judgment''; the Alaska bit is one route split choice) get reassigned to the Joshua Base in Alaska by TheFederation, [[spoiler:hoping to get rid of them in an elaborate trap set to weaken [=ZAFT=]'s ZAFT's military using the [[NukeEm Cyclops System]] since the heroes are doing too well.]] Like in ''Gundam SEED'', [[spoiler:Mu La Flaga (another case of this trope) discovers the Cyclops System and warns everyone to get the Hell out of Dodge.]] The heroes eventually get back at TheFederation in a big way, particularly in W, where [[spoiler: one [[spoiler:one division of Neue Warter (aka the (the heroes) intercepts TheFederation's fleet on it's its way to crush [=ZAFT=] ZAFT using nuclear weapons to overpower them. And then they proceed to ''utterly destroy'' TheFederation's forces and kill the commander who left them to die in Alaska, [[Anime/TekkamanBlade General Colbert]].]]
Colbert]]]].
** ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsW'': As mentioned above, the "Ms. Nadesico" contest from episode 19 of ''Anime/MartianSuccessorNadesico'' happens here, in ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsW'', but plays out differently. [[spoiler:Baron Ashura, disguised as Professor Yumi (as per one episode from the Mazinkaiser [=OVA=]), ''Mazinkaiser'' OVA), gets caught up in the contest and after finding out what the contest is about, the Baron casts a vote hoping to sabotage Warter (aka the (the heroes). In spectacular backfire fashion, it is Ashura's vote that is the tie-breaker that gets Yurika back her old job.]]
** In ''VideoGame/SuperRobotWarsAlpha 2'': 2'', [[Anime/MobileSuitGundam0083StardustMemory The the crew of the Albion]] gets reassigned to a backwater post in space under the guise to protect the GP-02A Gundam "Physalis" (in reality, TheFederation wants nothing to do with them and wants the Albion's crew far away from them). Sadly, the GP-02A gets stolen and the Albion team joins up with the Alpha Numbers to get it back and go on to stop Nashim Gan Eden, among other threats to the Earth in that game. And then, the Albion's crew gets assigned to menial tasks again in Alpha 3 (partially due to a lot of Alpha 2's story getting retconned), and once again, they take to the field and help save the day from [[spoiler:Keiser Ephes, the Spirit Emperor]].
* In ''VideoGame/SuikodenIII'', Thomas is sent to Budehuc Castle in order to keep him out of his scheming councilman father's way. When he turns the area into a thriving TruceZone, the Zexen Confederacy is less than pleased, and tries to force him to stop. Not only does he refuse, he winds up eventually providing the game's headquarters.
* ''VideoGame/BlazBlueContinuumShift'' toys with this trope a bit. Hazama, in a bid to freely {{mindrape}} Noel and Tsubaki, sends his (competent) lieutenant Makoto to the NOL branch in Ibukido as a way to keep her away from her close friends (the aforementioned Noel and Tsubaki). This crosses as a UriahGambit as, while he expected her career to dead-end long enough to let him do with them as he pleases, having her choke on seithr or get timefucked by the local cauldron works, too. While there are no accolades or desired reallocations to the 5th Hierarchical City in the wake of her work, to say the whole thing backfired fails to adequately describe how ''bad'' an idea this was in hindsight. [[note]]Not only did this fail to kill Makoto, but she [[spoiler:fell into an alternate timeline and witnessed events which she could use to abort or reverse Tsubaki's intended [[FaceHeelTurn change in alignment]]; acted with the interest of her friends first and foremost, which flies in the face of Terumi's ideal of despair, proceeding to [[SpannerInTheWorks balls up his plans]] as collateral damage; made friends with the "shitty vampire" Rachel Alucard and returned to her origin timeline; and learned the truth about beastkin and Prime Field Devices like her best friend Noel.]] Long story short, Terumi's options for a permanent Makoto solution boil down to [[FateWorseThanDeath Relius]] or [[JustShootHim homicide]]; she's capable of adapting to, if not already resilient to, ''just about everything else''.[[/note]]
* ''[[VideoGame/UnrealIITheAwakening Unreal 2]]'' played
''VideoGame/UnrealIITheAwakening'' plays with this. The player, Dalton, was kicked out of the Marines for disobeying the order to leave civilians to die, and has been trying to get back in since. In the mean time, meantime, the only work he can find is as a Marshal in the Terran Colonial Authority, policing "...the ass-end of space." space". Guess where the troubles start?
* Played with in ''VideoGame/SakuraWars''. The backwater post into which the talented rookie is forced despite complaints and obvious unsuitability? Yeah, there's a catastrophe going on... and [[LockedOutOfTheLoop his superiors knew it all along]].
* ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolidPeaceWalker'': Hot Coldman was assigned from the director of the CIA to the CIA Station Chief of Central America because he orchestrated the Virtuous Mission and Operation Snake Eater and needed to be shut up. He then builds a small army known as the Peace Sentinels and plans to create an AI-driven nuclear deterrent that can kill everyone. He almost destroys the world.
** ''VideoGame/MetalGearSolidVThePhantomPain'': Skull Face was one of The Patriots' best civilian-military operators until he grew resentful of Big Boss getting all the reputation and glory in the Patriots even after he quit. Zero reassigned him to Africa to look after his ethnic cleansing bioweapons, which caused the ethnicity-conscious hitman to snap, driving him to build a new form of portable Metal Gears which carried a very specific ethnic cleanser: [[spoiler:it kills anyone who constantly speaks English]].
* ''Videogame/TheNewOrderLastDaysOfEurope:'' Hitler decides to put Himmler away in Burgundy so he wouldn't interfere nor gather political power to threaten him... and ended up giving him a place where he could consolidate his own sort of power, implement a government even the Nazis think is horrifying, and generally advance his plots, including [[spoiler:the part where he touches off the nuclear apocalypse on purpose, so that the master race can live through it and reconquer the world]].
* ''VideoGame/AceCombat7SkiesUnknown''
** [[PlayerCharacter Trigger]] gets transferred to the Spare Squadron by Osea High Command [[spoiler:after aledgedly getting former president Harling killed during a skirmish]], under the assumption that he'll be killed in a suicide mission. Instead, Trigger becomes one of Osea's best pilots after surviving an engagement with the Erusean Ace Mihaly, and would become instrumental in ending the war.
** The Spare Squadron is a unit in the Osean Air Defense Force made up of criminals who were meant to be used as cannon fodder to soften up occupying Erusean forces so that the regular military can mop up the rest, and to probe for holes in Erusea's drone network. When Trigger gets assigned to them, they end up proving to be SurprisinglyEliteCannonFodder, so the squadron is disbanded, and the pilots get reassigned to the regular forces.
start?




to:

* ''VideoGame/WingCommander'':
** ''VideoGame/WingCommanderTheKilrathiSaga'':
*** In the intro to ''Wing Commander II'', Christopher Blair is accused of treason. There's no solid evidence against him, so the court martial only convicts him of negligence and demotes him, but Admiral Tolwyn remains convinced he's a traitor and reassigns him to a little backwater station. Ten years later he encounters the [[ProudWarriorRace Kilrathi]] in the area and is forced to save the day, soon becoming the hero of another major campaign.
*** In ''Wing Commander III'', he's given another crappy assignment by the same admiral. This time, however, Tolwyn deliberately assigned him to an unimpressive carrier so that when the time came, he could use Blair in his plan to end the war without drawing too much attention from the enemy.
** The true Reassignment Backfire occurs in ''VideoGame/WingCommanderIVThePriceOfFreedom'' when [[spoiler:Blair gets involved in going rogue to fight a conspiracy that turns out to be run by Tolwyn himself. He ends up exposing his eugenics plans and gets him convicted for treason]].



[[folder:Web Comics]]

to:

[[folder:Web Comics]][[folder:Webcomics]]
* Mr. Kornada of ''Webcomic/{{Freefall}}'' is a [[ItsAllAboutMe self-important]] [[LethallyStupid dolt]] who embodies every negative stereotype of middle management. Eventually he gets KickedUpstairs to the Vice-Presidency of Paperclip Allocation at Ecosystems Unlimited -- which is a paperless office. [[spoiler:When his nephew, Ecosystems Unlimited's CFO Mr. Ishiguro, goes on sick leave, he gains access to two executive security codes: enough to authorize the activation of a security failsafe on half a billion sapient robots so he can seize their assets. He's stopped, barely, but his superiors are horrified by how close he came to destroying 99.99% of the planet's workforce.]]
-->'''Mr. Ishiguro:''' I gave him a make-work job! His job was to do nothing! How can a person mess up a job to do nothing?



* Mr. Kornada of ''Webcomic/{{Freefall}}'' is a [[ItsAllAboutMe self-important]] [[LethallyStupid dolt]] who embodies every negative stereotype of middle management. Eventually he gets KickedUpstairs to the Vice-Presidency of Paperclip Allocation at Ecosystems Unlimited -- which is a paperless office. [[spoiler:When his nephew, Ecosystems Unlimited's CFO Mr. Ishiguro, goes on sick leave, he gains access to two executive security codes: enough to authorize the activation of a security failsafe on half a billion sapient robots so he can seize their assets. He's stopped, barely, but his superiors are horrified by how close he came to destroying 99.99% of the planet's workforce.]]
--> '''Mr. Ishiguro:''' I gave him a make-work job! His job was to do nothing! How can a person mess up a job to do nothing?



[[folder:Web Video]]
* ''WebVideo/ScootertrixTheAbridged:'' General Apple Bloom [[AlwaysSomeoneBetter resents General Flash Sentry for succeeding at everything]]. When Bloom draws up her strategy for Equestria to wage a war on two fronts, she isn't the one who decides to send Sentry and his forces to the borders of the Changeling Empire--far away from the Crystal Empire, where the real fighting is supposed to happen--but all the same, she's openly glad that that Sentry won't be able to steal any of her glory this time. Then Apple Bloom's grand strategy falls apart within a week, while Flash Sentry's victories against the changelings wind up being the only good news from that same period.
[[/folder]]



%% Alphabetized
* In ''WesternAnimation/AmericanDad'', One episode has Stan going too far with some jokes at his superior that get him 'promoted' that requires relocation to the middle east. While originally horrified at the prospect while the rest of his family enjoys the change, he later comes to the realization that the culture is extremely sexist against women which feeds on his misogyny of being the man of the house and as a result he starts to love his new assignment.

to:

%% Alphabetized
* In ''WesternAnimation/AmericanDad'', ''WesternAnimation/AmericanDad'': One episode has Stan going too far with some jokes at his superior that get him 'promoted' that requires relocation to the middle east. While originally horrified at the prospect while the rest of his family enjoys the change, he later comes to the realization that the culture is extremely sexist against women which feeds on his misogyny of being the man of the house and as a result he starts to love his new assignment.



** Zigzagged regarding Zim. The titular character's assigners and rulers, the Tallest, make up a planet past the edge of their star map, and send Zim there so they will never see him again. They're shocked when, six months later, Zim reports back alive and well, saying that he has built his home base on some planet called "Earth". Earth still is a backwater planet with nothing of interest to the Irken race and Zim is ultimately too incompetent to conquer it, meaning that (outside of reports) the Tallest don't have to deal with him as often as before. During "Backseat Drivers Beyond the Stars" this comes back to bite them as Zim hijacks the Tallest's ship in order to bring them to Earth to witness his latest plan for world domination in person, almost killing them both and blowing up their ship in the process. [[spoiler: It backfires on them more permanently in ''WesternAnimation/InvaderZimEnterTheFlorpus'', where Zim's antics create the titular NegativeSpaceWedgie, which swallows up the ''entire Irken fleet'', Tallest included.]]
** This also backfired somewhat with their assignment to Invader Skoodge. The Tallest openly despise him, seemingly even more than they hate Zim. When he shows up for assignment they don't even put up a facade that he's important to them. They assign him to the home planet of the slaughtering Rat People and even provide an illustration of said Rat People preparing to rip Skoodge apart making it abundantly clear that they're sending him there to die. Then Skoodge ends up being the first invader to conquer his planet. While the Tallest have another planet added to their Empire, they still have to deal with the short, ugly, obnoxious, and still living Skoodge.
*** The Tallest decide to deal with this by giving Skoodge the 'honour' of a brand-new tradition: That the successful invader be loaded into a cannon and fired as the opening shot of the OrbitalBombardment to cleanse the planet. [[WhatCouldHaveBeen If the show hadn't been cancelled]] Skoodge was planned to survive this as well and eventually be assigned to Zim, making him a double example of this trope given Zim's tendencies for his plans to backfire onto the Irken Empire.

to:

** Zigzagged regarding Zim. The titular character's assigners and rulers, the Tallest, make up a planet past the edge of their star map, and send Zim there so they will never see him again. They're shocked when, six months later, Zim reports back alive and well, saying that he has built his home base on some planet called "Earth". Earth still is a backwater planet with nothing of interest to the Irken race and Zim is ultimately too incompetent to conquer it, meaning that (outside of reports) the Tallest don't have to deal with him as often as before. During "Backseat Drivers Beyond the Stars" this comes back to bite them as Zim hijacks the Tallest's ship in order to bring them to Earth to witness his latest plan for world domination in person, almost killing them both and blowing up their ship in the process. [[spoiler: It [[spoiler:It backfires on them more permanently in ''WesternAnimation/InvaderZimEnterTheFlorpus'', where Zim's antics create the titular NegativeSpaceWedgie, which swallows up the ''entire Irken fleet'', Tallest included.]]
** This also backfired somewhat with their assignment to Invader Skoodge. The Tallest openly despise him, seemingly even more than they hate Zim. When he shows up for assignment they don't even put up a facade that he's important to them. They assign him to the home planet of the slaughtering Rat People and even provide an illustration of said Rat People preparing to rip Skoodge apart making it abundantly clear that they're sending him there to die. Then Skoodge ends up being the first invader to conquer his planet. While the Tallest have another planet added to their Empire, they still have to deal with the short, ugly, obnoxious, and still living Skoodge.
***
Skoodge. The Tallest decide to deal with this by giving Skoodge the 'honour' of a brand-new tradition: That the successful invader be loaded into a cannon and fired as the opening shot of the OrbitalBombardment to cleanse the planet. [[WhatCouldHaveBeen If the show hadn't been cancelled]] cancelled]], Skoodge was planned to survive this as well and eventually be assigned to Zim, making him a double example of this trope given Zim's tendencies for his plans to backfire onto the Irken Empire.



** ''WesternAnimation/TransformersRobotsInDisguise2015'' features this as well. Bumblebee was given a position as a mere beat cop after playing a major role in ending the war. At the end of the series, it's revealed that he (and other major Autobots) were given lowly positions so that the corrupt government could denigrate Optimus Prime and keep them from interfering with their plans for galactic conquest. Unfortunately for them, Bumblebee's job devotion and loyalty to Optimus's legacy took him far from Cybertron and put him in a position to foil their, and many other villains', plans.

to:

** ''WesternAnimation/TransformersRobotsInDisguise2015'' features this as well. Bumblebee was given a position as a mere beat cop after playing a major role in ending the war. At the end of the series, it's revealed that he (and other major Autobots) were given lowly positions so that the corrupt government could denigrate Optimus Prime and keep them from interfering with their plans for galactic conquest. Unfortunately for them, Bumblebee's job devotion and loyalty to Optimus's legacy took him far from Cybertron and put him in a position to foil their, and their (and many other villains', villains') plans.



** UsefulNotes/ChesterAArthur was chosen as running-mate to UsefulNotes/JamesGarfield at the 1880 election, largely because Garfield needed someone to placate rival Roscoe Conkling's faction of the party. Only six months into his term, however, Garfield was assassinated, and Arthur became President. Arthur's ascendency then turned into this for ''Conkling'' (who had only chosen Arthur because he was currently unemployed), as he populated his new cabinet with people from all sections of the party in order to unify it; his new cabinet just so happened to exclude Conkling himself, dashing his hopes to become Secretary of State and use that as a springboard to run for President in 1884. On top of that, due to the US government's patronage system laying at the root of Garfield's assassination[[note]]Charles J. Guiteau, Garfield's assassin, was a {{narcissist}} who believed that [[SmallNameBigEgo a speech he'd written had gotten Garfield elected]], felt that he was owed a consulship by the Garfield administration in return (as was the custom in the days of the patronage system), and was furious when he didn't get it.[[/note]], Arthur introduced civil service reforms, making it harder for political machines like Conkling's to hand out high-ranking government assignments to their cronies.

to:

** UsefulNotes/ChesterAArthur was chosen as running-mate to UsefulNotes/JamesGarfield at the 1880 election, largely because Garfield needed someone to placate rival Roscoe Conkling's faction of the party. Only six months into his term, however, Garfield was assassinated, and Arthur became President. Arthur's ascendency then turned into this for ''Conkling'' (who had only chosen Arthur because he was currently unemployed), as he populated his new cabinet with people from all sections of the party in order to unify it; his new cabinet just so happened to exclude Conkling himself, dashing his hopes to become Secretary of State and use that as a springboard to run for President in 1884. On top of that, due to the US government's patronage system laying at the root of Garfield's assassination[[note]]Charles assassination,[[note]]Charles J. Guiteau, Garfield's assassin, was a {{narcissist}} who believed that [[SmallNameBigEgo a speech he'd written had gotten Garfield elected]], felt that he was owed a consulship by the Garfield administration in return (as was the custom in the days of the patronage system), and was furious when he didn't get it.[[/note]], [[/note]] Arthur introduced civil service reforms, making it harder for political machines like Conkling's to hand out high-ranking government assignments to their cronies.



** UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt needed to lose his wartime VP, the left-wing firebrand Henry Wallace, for the 1944 election in order to keep the rest of the Democratic Party leadership happy. So his new running mate was obscure Missouri Senator UsefulNotes/HarrySTruman... who was Vice President for a grand total of 82 days before Roosevelt's long illness finally got the better of him. Truman was nearly two weeks into being President before he briefed for the ''very first time on the Manhattan Project''. The party leadership who had put him into office got antsy when Truman made three things clear: he would not abandon the New Deal social programs,[[note]]Which was expected and more or less fine on ideological and political terms--the New Deal was ''very'' popular--but seen as somewhat unrealistic given the Republican victory in the 1946 midterms[[/note]] he would pursue civil rights legislation over the objections of the Dixiecrats,[[note]]Which was completely unexpected, as White Missouri Democrats with Southern heritage like Truman (his mother's family in particular had backed the Confederacy during the Civil War) were usually segregationists; this naturally infuriated the Dixiecrats. That said, this should ''not'' have been unexpected looking at Truman's personal history; he had always been as fair as possible to the Black community as a local elected official in Kansas City, and one of his earliest jobs in his personal life was as a Shabbos goy for KC-area Jewish families. (In the mid-1940s South, antisemitism and anti-Black racism went pretty hand-in-hand).[[/note]] and he would not change his folksy-but-flinty personality to better "look the part" of president.[[note]]Which was possibly expected but still infuriated everyone anyway.[[/note]] The reassignment backfired on them when Truman defeated their handpicked primary candidate, and then won a ''four-way'' race[[note]]Besides the official Democratic candidate (Truman) and the Republican (New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey), that election saw Democratic splinter candidates from the left (the aforementioned Henry Wallace having established a new "Progressive Party" to advance his candidacy) and the right (the Dixiecrats having founded a "States' Rights Democratic Party" to nominate Strom Thurmond on a segregationist platform). There is a ''reason'' for that "[[AssumedWin Dewey Defeats Truman]]" headline, after all.[[/note]] for a second term, forcing the party leadership to accept his agenda.
* UsefulNotes/AndrewJackson appointed UsefulNotes/JamesBuchanan, an obscure former Pennsylvania Congressman, minister to Russia to get him out of Washington, saying that "If we kept a ministry at the North Pole, [[ReassignedToAntarctica I would have sent him there]]." Though Buchanan served (in this as in all things) without distinction, the appointment fooled other Democrats into believing he had foreign policy chops, which lead to a long string of lackluster diplomatic posts, including stints as minister to the United Kingdom (then one of the top two diplomatic assignments, along with minister to France) and as Secretary of State. When he ran for president in the chaotic three-way election of 1856, voters assumed this long history indicated competence, and Buchanan's frequent trips abroad meant he had never formed any strong opinions on slavery, immigration, or industrialization, so he didn't alienate as many voters as the Republican or Know-Nothing candidates and carried the day. And the nation then got [[BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor exactly what it had voted for]]: a milquetoast president without convictions, who spent four years letting the country work itself to the brink of war before leaving office just in time not to have to deal with the consequences. During his lame duck period he let several members of his cabinet get away with ''openly treasonous behavior'' in putting weapons into the hands of the already forming secessionist movement - despite the incoming Lincoln administration begging him to do something, ''anything'' to stop this madness. He also embarrassed himself by relying on exaggerated rumors and hearsay to order a completely unnecessary military march to the Utah Territory. The one time he ''did'' speak out on a current issue, endorsing the ruling in ''Dred Scott v. Sandford'' before it happened, it backfired spectacularly, as it even enraged Northerners who hadn't otherwise cared for the slavery issue one way or another before. He arguably also put his thumb on the scale, trying to convince the Court to give a ruling that "settled the issue once and for all" and trying to get at least one northern Justice to vote in favor of Chief Justice Taney's ruling. Buchanan is one of the two or three candidates for "worst President in history".

to:

** UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt needed to lose his wartime VP, the left-wing firebrand Henry Wallace, for the 1944 election in order to keep the rest of the Democratic Party leadership happy. So his new running mate was obscure Missouri Senator UsefulNotes/HarrySTruman... who was Vice President for a grand total of 82 days before Roosevelt's long illness finally got the better of him. Truman was nearly two weeks into being President before he briefed for the ''very first time on the Manhattan Project''. The party leadership who had put him into office got antsy when Truman made three things clear: he would not abandon the New Deal social programs,[[note]]Which was expected and more or less fine on ideological and political terms--the terms -- the New Deal was ''very'' popular--but popular -- but seen as somewhat unrealistic given the Republican victory in the 1946 midterms[[/note]] he would pursue civil rights legislation over the objections of the Dixiecrats,[[note]]Which was completely unexpected, as White Missouri Democrats with Southern heritage like Truman (his mother's family in particular had backed the Confederacy during the Civil War) were usually segregationists; this naturally infuriated the Dixiecrats. That said, this should ''not'' have been unexpected looking at Truman's personal history; he had always been as fair as possible to the Black community as a local elected official in Kansas City, and one of his earliest jobs in his personal life was as a Shabbos goy for KC-area Jewish families. (In the mid-1940s South, antisemitism and anti-Black racism went pretty hand-in-hand).[[/note]] and he would not change his folksy-but-flinty personality to better "look the part" of president.[[note]]Which was possibly expected but still infuriated everyone anyway.[[/note]] The reassignment backfired on them when Truman defeated their handpicked primary candidate, and then won a ''four-way'' race[[note]]Besides the official Democratic candidate (Truman) and the Republican (New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey), that election saw Democratic splinter candidates from the left (the aforementioned Henry Wallace having established a new "Progressive Party" to advance his candidacy) and the right (the Dixiecrats having founded a "States' Rights Democratic Party" to nominate Strom Thurmond on a segregationist platform). There is a ''reason'' for that "[[AssumedWin Dewey Defeats Truman]]" headline, after all.[[/note]] for a second term, forcing the party leadership to accept his agenda.
* UsefulNotes/AndrewJackson appointed UsefulNotes/JamesBuchanan, an obscure former Pennsylvania Congressman, minister to Russia to get him out of Washington, saying that "If we kept a ministry at the North Pole, [[ReassignedToAntarctica I would have sent him there]]." Though Buchanan served (in this as in all things) without distinction, the appointment fooled other Democrats into believing he had foreign policy chops, which lead to a long string of lackluster diplomatic posts, including stints as minister to the United Kingdom (then one of the top two diplomatic assignments, along with minister to France) and as Secretary of State. When he ran for president in the chaotic three-way election of 1856, voters assumed this long history indicated competence, and Buchanan's frequent trips abroad meant he had never formed any strong opinions on slavery, immigration, or industrialization, so he didn't alienate as many voters as the Republican or Know-Nothing candidates and carried the day. And the nation then got [[BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor exactly what it had voted for]]: a milquetoast president without convictions, who spent four years letting the country work itself to the brink of war before leaving office just in time not to have to deal with the consequences. During his lame duck period he let several members of his cabinet get away with ''openly treasonous behavior'' in putting weapons into the hands of the already forming secessionist movement - -- despite the incoming Lincoln administration begging him to do something, ''anything'' to stop this madness. He also embarrassed himself by relying on exaggerated rumors and hearsay to order a completely unnecessary military march to the Utah Territory. The one time he ''did'' speak out on a current issue, endorsing the ruling in ''Dred Scott v. Sandford'' before it happened, it backfired spectacularly, as it even enraged Northerners who hadn't otherwise cared for the slavery issue one way or another before. He arguably also put his thumb on the scale, trying to convince the Court to give a ruling that "settled the issue once and for all" and trying to get at least one northern Justice to vote in favor of Chief Justice Taney's ruling. Buchanan is one of the two or three candidates for "worst President in history".



* Pope John XXIII, elected after the nearly two decade reign of Pope Pius XII, was expected to be a "stopgap" Pope. His age (he was almost 77) and health were such that it was expected that he would reign briefly and quietly, and make no lasting impact on the Papacy. While his reign was indeed less than five years, [[ShortLivedBigImpact he used that time to call the Second Vatican Council]], setting in motion the biggest changes to Catholic worship and church procedures since the Counter-Reformation.
** His predecessor to the name, Pope John XXII, may have [[ThePlan planned]] his way to the papacy by playing on this trope. After the death of Clement V, the cardinals failed to elect a new Pope for two entire years, because their votes were terminally split between three factions: the Italian bloc (who wanted the Papacy to return to Rome), the Gascon bloc (who were perfectly cool with the Avignon Papacy, as long as they enjoyed the same privileges as under the previous Pope), and the French bloc (who wanted to keep the Pope on French soil but without the special privileges). Lots of corruption and votes for sale all around, and no resolution in sight. Eventually, the King of France had enough of waiting--he needed a Pope doublequick so he could divorce his first wife--and forced a conclave, locking the cardinals up inside a convent with rationed food and water until they made up their minds. According to one story, the future John XXII (then still Monsignor Duèze) waited until his peers were weak with hunger, then pretended to be on his deathbed. He was 72 at the time. The rest of the cardinals promptly elected him, figuring he'd last a few months tops, and then they'd happily be back to the lucrative status quo of bribes-for-votes in a new conclave. Not only did John's reign as Pope last for ''18 years'' after that, but he was one of the most activist Popes in history, heavily involving himself in European politics and reorganizing the entire Church.
* "Mr. K" (Yutaka Katayama), president of Nissan [=USA=] in TheSixties and TheSeventies, was originally PutOnABus to America (away from corporate in [[TokyoIsTheCenterOfTheUniverse Tokyo]]) because of his "rogue" attitude. This eventually backfired for the parent company, as Katayama could talk to American car salesmen as equals, renamed the "Fairlady" sports car [=240Z=] (legend has it he personally swapped the badges over on the first cars on Long Beach docks), and exponentially raised awareness and sales of the Datsun brand in the US... and that meant the brand's sales and reputation have never really recovered from the [[ExecutiveMeddling name change]] to "Nissan" after his retirement.
* When Egyptian President UsefulNotes/GamalAbdelNasser died in 1970, the Egyptian elite decided to leave Vice President Anwar Sadat--to whom the presidency had devolved by law--in place as a temporary caretaker, assuming he would be easy to manipulate in office and to force out should it prove necessary. Nasser had chosen his various Veeps on the basis of loyalty, pliability, and consistency: note that neither intelligence nor competence was a qualification, and indeed they were considered something of a drawback. Six months later [[MagnificentBastard Sadat]] proved to have been concealing both qualities for years, and purged the elites in the "[[ThePurge Corrective Revolution]]." His eventful administration included the [[UsefulNotes/ArabIsraeliConflict Yom Kippur War,]] negotiation of peace with Israel, a war with Libya that turned into a CurbStompBattle victory for Egypt and his assassination in 1981.
** This brings us to Sadat's successor, Hosni Mubarak. Sadat had followed Nasser's lead where Veep selection was concerned, so when he was assassinated, the whole government was scared of what the idiot at the top might do. If Mubarak had started any Sadat-style Machiavellian games, the military brass would likely have pushed back ''hard''. However, Mubarak proved to care little for radical plans or purges, or anything other than enriching himself and staying in power. He was content to let Egypt run itself... into the ground, as it happened.

to:

* Pope John XXIII, elected after the nearly two decade two-decade reign of Pope Pius XII, was expected to be a "stopgap" Pope. His age (he was almost 77) and health were such that it was expected that he would reign briefly and quietly, and make no lasting impact on the Papacy. While his reign was indeed less than five years, [[ShortLivedBigImpact he used that time to call the Second Vatican Council]], setting in motion the biggest changes to Catholic worship and church procedures since the Counter-Reformation.
** His * The above's predecessor to the name, Pope John XXII, may have [[ThePlan planned]] his way to the papacy by playing on this trope. After the death of Clement V, the cardinals failed to elect a new Pope for two entire years, because their votes were terminally split between three factions: the Italian bloc (who wanted the Papacy to return to Rome), the Gascon bloc (who were perfectly cool with the Avignon Papacy, as long as they enjoyed the same privileges as under the previous Pope), and the French bloc (who wanted to keep the Pope on French soil but without the special privileges). Lots of corruption and votes for sale all around, and no resolution in sight. Eventually, the King of France had enough of waiting--he waiting -- he needed a Pope doublequick double-quick so he could divorce his first wife--and wife -- and forced a conclave, locking the cardinals up inside a convent with rationed food and water until they made up their minds. According to one story, the future John XXII (then still Monsignor Duèze) waited until his peers were weak with hunger, then pretended to be on his deathbed. He was 72 at the time. The rest of the cardinals promptly elected him, figuring he'd last a few months tops, and then they'd happily be back to the lucrative status quo of bribes-for-votes in a new conclave. Not only did John's reign as Pope last for ''18 years'' after that, but he was one of the most activist Popes in history, heavily involving himself in European politics and reorganizing the entire Church.
* "Mr. K" (Yutaka Katayama), president of Nissan [=USA=] USA in TheSixties The60s and TheSeventies, The70s, was originally PutOnABus to America (away from corporate in [[TokyoIsTheCenterOfTheUniverse Tokyo]]) because of his "rogue" attitude. This eventually backfired for the parent company, as Katayama could talk to American car salesmen as equals, renamed the "Fairlady" sports car [=240Z=] (legend has it he personally swapped the badges over on the first cars on Long Beach docks), and exponentially raised awareness and sales of the Datsun brand in the US... and that meant the brand's sales and reputation have never really recovered from the [[ExecutiveMeddling name change]] to "Nissan" after his retirement.
* When Egyptian President UsefulNotes/GamalAbdelNasser died in 1970, the Egyptian elite decided to leave Vice President Anwar Sadat--to Sadat -- to whom the presidency had devolved by law--in law -- in place as a temporary caretaker, assuming he would be easy to manipulate in office and to force out should it prove necessary. Nasser had chosen his various Veeps on the basis of loyalty, pliability, and consistency: note that neither intelligence nor competence was a qualification, and indeed they were considered something of a drawback. Six months later [[MagnificentBastard Sadat]] proved to have been concealing both qualities for years, and purged the elites in the "[[ThePurge Corrective Revolution]]." Revolution]]". His eventful administration included the [[UsefulNotes/ArabIsraeliConflict Yom Kippur War,]] War]], negotiation of peace with Israel, a war with Libya that turned into a CurbStompBattle victory for Egypt and his assassination in 1981.
** This brings us to * The above Sadat's successor, Hosni Mubarak. Sadat had followed Nasser's lead where Veep selection was concerned, so when he was assassinated, the whole government was scared of what the idiot at the top might do. If Mubarak had started any Sadat-style Machiavellian games, the military brass would likely have pushed back ''hard''. However, Mubarak proved to care little for radical plans or purges, or anything other than enriching himself and staying in power. He was content to let Egypt run itself... into the ground, as it happened.



* Rudolf Hess had been an important figure in the rise of the Nazi Party and then the early years of the Third Reich, but as World War II really got underway, his eccentrities and poor grasp of military strategy got him sidelined to handling foreign affairs, as the role -- not counting the actually important work such as dealing with Mussolini and the Soviets, which was handled by the actual foreign secretary, Joachim von Ribbentrop -- didn't demand much more than demanding that Britain surrender, keeping the officially neutral but German-sympathetic Spanish regime of Franco on-side, and persuading other countries that it was in their best interest not to get involved in the war. However, when Hess found out about the planned invasion of the Soviet Union, he became concerned (correctly, as it turned out) that Germany couldn't fight a war on two fronts, and took it upon himself to fly to Britain and offer them a peace treaty... whereupon he ran out of fuel, crashed, and was promptly arrested. Not only did the incident give the British a much-needed morale boost and severely humiliate Germany, Hess's having gone behind Hitler's back made the latter far more paranoid and caused him to begin second-guessing everyone outside of his innermost circle, which would cause Germany problems later on in the war. To add insult to injury, Hess's being sidelined in the early years of the war and then imprisoned for most of the conflict caused him to be one of only a few high-ranking Nazis to escape the death penalty at the Nuremberg Trials (albeit Hess by all accounts considered his eventual life sentence a FateWorseThanDeath, and killed himself after the last appeal he was ever likely to receive got swiftly rejected).

to:

* Rudolf Hess had been an important figure in the rise of the Nazi Party and then the early years of the Third Reich, but as World War II really got underway, his eccentrities eccentricities and poor grasp of military strategy got him sidelined to handling foreign affairs, as the role -- not counting the actually important work such as dealing with Mussolini and the Soviets, which was handled by the actual foreign secretary, Joachim von Ribbentrop -- didn't demand much more than demanding that Britain surrender, keeping the officially neutral but German-sympathetic Spanish regime of Franco on-side, and persuading other countries that it was in their best interest not to get involved in the war. However, when Hess found out about the planned invasion of the Soviet Union, he became concerned (correctly, as it turned out) that Germany couldn't fight a war on two fronts, and took it upon himself to fly to Britain and offer them a peace treaty... whereupon he ran out of fuel, crashed, and was promptly arrested. Not only did the incident give the British a much-needed morale boost and severely humiliate Germany, Hess's having gone behind Hitler's back made the latter far more paranoid and caused him to begin second-guessing everyone outside of his innermost circle, which would cause Germany problems later on in the war. To add insult to injury, Hess's being sidelined in the early years of the war and then imprisoned for most of the conflict caused him to be one of only a few high-ranking Nazis to escape the death penalty at the Nuremberg Trials (albeit Hess by all accounts considered his eventual life sentence a FateWorseThanDeath, and killed himself after the last appeal he was ever likely to receive got swiftly rejected).



* There used to be a saying in German politics, "Hast du einen Opa, dann schick ihn nach Europa" - If you have a granddad (old tatter) send him to Europe (put him in a EU position). However, Martin Schulz, whose prior highest elected office was Mayor of Würselen[[note]] never heard of Würselen? Exactly![[/note]], soon established a high profile for himself in the EU parliament and ultimately came to be known even among the rank and file members of his party when he rose to president of the EU parliament and candidate for head of the EU commission (narrowly losing that election to Jean Claude Juncker) before he was chosen as a stopgap to run the 2017 campaign of his social democratic party as candidate for chancellor. He managed to poll higher than his party had in years, but then his support somehow collapsed over the summer and he ultimately ended back up in the political wilderness.
* Angela Merkel started her political career in post-reunification Germany on the virtue of her being a woman from the East and Helmut Kohl needing a woman from the East. She was made minister of women and youth and later the environment, two positions that were universally regarded as afterthoughts, but which had the distinct advantage of not attracting major scandal[[note]]Merkel ''was'' involved in drafting a rather controversial bottle deposit law and with the nuclear waste facilities but both those scandals did not come to light until years later and are rarely seen as being tied to her[[/note]], so she gained inside experience of government but no "baggage" of any faction within or outside her party opposing any policy position she held. In 1998 the CDU lost the elections and Merkel lost her job, but slowly but surely she managed to eliminate inner-party rivals, in part because many of them - such as Kohl or Wolfgang Schäuble - were involved in a political donation scandal in which she hadn't had a possibility to become involved due to her position. Her coup de grace however happened in 2002. Back then it was widely expected that Gerhard Schröder would lose the upcoming elections, so who would be candidate for chancellor would be immensely important. Merkel, however, "graciously" backed down in a now-famous breakfast with Edmund Stoiber of the CSU held in his home in Wolfratshausen. What Merkel seems to have intuitively known was that Schröder is a damn good political campaigner and whatever his faults, he had a keen instinct that the German electorate was decisively ''not'' in favor of the Iraq War then already seeming likely. Schröder also showed "crisis manager" capabilities when he personally flew to help flooding victims in East Germany. So Merkel by reassigning herself to political Antarctica in 2002 was poised to become candidate for chancellor following the next elections and even Schröder's campaigning in the 2005 early elections could not save him as a substantial faction of his party broke away under Oskar Lafontaine, an erstwhile friend and colleague but now bitter political enemy of Schröder. Merkel basically just had to wait for the SPD to give into the inevitable and walk to a Grand Coalition under her leadership.

to:

* There used to be a saying in German politics, "Hast du einen Opa, dann schick ihn nach Europa" - If -- translated, "If you have a granddad (old tatter) send him to Europe (put him in a an EU position). position)". However, Martin Schulz, whose prior highest elected office was Mayor of Würselen[[note]] never Würselen,[[note]]Never heard of Würselen? Exactly![[/note]], Exactly![[/note]] soon established a high profile for himself in the EU parliament and ultimately came to be known even among the rank and file members of his party when he rose to president of the EU parliament and candidate for head of the EU commission (narrowly losing that election to Jean Claude Juncker) before he was chosen as a stopgap to run the 2017 campaign of his social democratic party as candidate for chancellor. He managed to poll higher than his party had in years, but then his support somehow collapsed over the summer summer, and he ultimately ended back up in the political wilderness.
* Angela Merkel started her political career in post-reunification Germany on the virtue of her being a woman from the East and Helmut Kohl needing a woman from the East. She was made minister of women and youth and later the environment, two positions that were universally regarded as afterthoughts, but which had the distinct advantage of not attracting major scandal[[note]]Merkel scandal,[[note]]Merkel ''was'' involved in drafting a rather controversial bottle deposit law and with the nuclear waste facilities but both those scandals did not come to light until years later and are rarely seen as being tied to her[[/note]], her[[/note]] so she gained inside experience of government but no "baggage" of any faction within or outside her party opposing any policy position she held. In 1998 the CDU lost the elections and Merkel lost her job, but slowly but surely surely, she managed to eliminate inner-party rivals, in part because many of them - -- such as Kohl or Wolfgang Schäuble - -- were involved in a political donation scandal in which she hadn't had a possibility to become involved due to her position. Her coup de grace however happened in 2002. Back then it was widely expected that Gerhard Schröder would lose the upcoming elections, so who would be candidate for chancellor would be immensely important. Merkel, however, "graciously" backed down in a now-famous breakfast with Edmund Stoiber of the CSU held in his home in Wolfratshausen. What Merkel seems to have intuitively known was that Schröder is a damn good political campaigner and whatever his faults, he had a keen instinct that the German electorate was decisively ''not'' in favor of the Iraq War then already seeming likely. Schröder also showed "crisis manager" capabilities when he personally flew to help flooding victims in East Germany. So Merkel by reassigning herself to political Antarctica in 2002 was poised to become candidate for chancellor following the next elections and even Schröder's campaigning in the 2005 early elections could not save him as a substantial faction of his party broke away under Oskar Lafontaine, an erstwhile friend and colleague but now bitter political enemy of Schröder. Merkel basically just had to wait for the SPD to give into the inevitable and walk to a Grand Coalition under her leadership.



** And it got a bit worse for Trump: During his confirmation hearings, Sessions denied having any contact with Russian government officials, only to be caught in a lie when it was found that he had met with the Russian Ambassador more than once, and so was forced to recuse himself from the investigation of possible Russian collusion with the Trump campaign. This left Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein to appoint former FBI Director Robert Mueller as a Special Counsel[[note]]after the controversial firing of FBI director James Comey, which lead to accusations against Trump of obstruction of justice, especially after Trump basically admitted he fired Comey to make the investigation go away because it was undermining his administration (and one could obviously point out that an innocent man would let the investigation run its course, but [[NotHelpingYourCase Trump instead made himself look like he was suspicious and/or so egotistical and thin-skinned that he couldn't stand letting it continue any longer]])[[/note]], with a very broad mandate to investigate anything related Russian election meddling, and thus keeping the scandal from going away anytime soon, nevermind multiple associates of Trump being investigated, arrested and even becoming informants for the investigation.

to:

** And it got a bit worse for Trump: During his confirmation hearings, Sessions denied having any contact with Russian government officials, only to be caught in a lie when it was found that he had met with the Russian Ambassador more than once, and so was forced to recuse himself from the investigation of possible Russian collusion with the Trump campaign. This left Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein to appoint former FBI Director Robert Mueller as a Special Counsel[[note]]after Counsel,[[note]]after the controversial firing of FBI director James Comey, which lead to accusations against Trump of obstruction of justice, especially after Trump basically admitted he fired Comey to make the investigation go away because it was undermining his administration (and one could obviously point out that an innocent man would let the investigation run its course, but [[NotHelpingYourCase Trump instead made himself look like he was suspicious and/or so egotistical and thin-skinned that he couldn't stand letting it continue any longer]])[[/note]], longer]])[[/note]] with a very broad mandate to investigate anything related Russian election meddling, and thus keeping the scandal from going away anytime soon, nevermind multiple associates of Trump being investigated, arrested and even becoming informants for the investigation.



* During UsefulNotes/KonstantinChernenko's brief time as Soviet leader, his foreign minister, Andrei Gromyko was seen by many as the one really making all the key decisions, due to Chernenko's poor health and even poorer grasp of international politics. Following Chernenko's death in early 1985, Gromyko manoeuvred for UsefulNotes/MikhailGorbachev to succeed him, confident that he could keep the far younger and less experienced Gorbachev under control and mould him into someone who would keep up the Cold War. Instead, Gromyko found himself KickedUpstairs to the ceremonial position of head of state by Gorbachev, who then proceeded to implement the radically different ideologies of ''Glasnost'' and ''Perestroika'' -- the end result of which was the Soviet Union's collapsing altogether a little over six years later [[note]](though in fairness to Gorbachev, it's long been debated how much of this was due to his policies, and how much was caused by years of stagnation and poor decision-making by Chernenko's predecessors, UsefulNotes/LeonidBrezhnev and UsefulNotes/YuriAndropov)[[/note]].

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* During UsefulNotes/KonstantinChernenko's brief time as Soviet leader, his foreign minister, Andrei Gromyko was seen by many as the one really making all the key decisions, due to Chernenko's poor health and even poorer grasp of international politics. Following Chernenko's death in early 1985, Gromyko manoeuvred for UsefulNotes/MikhailGorbachev to succeed him, confident that he could keep the far younger and less experienced Gorbachev under control and mould him into someone who would keep up the Cold War. Instead, Gromyko found himself KickedUpstairs to the ceremonial position of head of state by Gorbachev, who then proceeded to implement the radically different ideologies of ''Glasnost'' and ''Perestroika'' -- the end result of which was the Soviet Union's collapsing altogether a little over six years later [[note]](though later.[[note]](Though in fairness to Gorbachev, it's long been debated how much of this was due to his policies, and how much was caused by years of stagnation and poor decision-making by Chernenko's predecessors, UsefulNotes/LeonidBrezhnev and UsefulNotes/YuriAndropov)[[/note]].UsefulNotes/YuriAndropov.)[[/note]]



* In 1938, talented Soviet general Georgy Zhukov, who was seen as a threat to Stalin, was semi-exiled to the remote and irrelevant military post of commanding the First Soviet Mongolian Army Group, which was responsible for securing the southern border of Siberia. However, Japan picked that year to pick a fight with the Soviets, and instead of running into a force led by a drunken backwater incompetent they ran into one of the most brilliant generals of the 20th century. Oops. It did not go well for them, and Zhukov decisively-- but quietly-- crushed the Japanese forces, which forced them into a quiet non-aggression pact that secured the eastern flank of the Soviet Union until the end of World War II, which allowed them a free hand to deal with Nazi aggression in 1941.
* After investigations showed he'd embellished a number of news stories, Brian Williams was removed from NBC's flagship ''Nightly News'' program to being a "breaking news" anchor on the struggling MSNBC without any guaranteed air time. This was done in the hopes that he'd leave on his own volition and allow the network to avoid paying severance on his enormous contract. However, Williams toughed it out and proved that he could keep drawing in ratings MSNBC desperately needed. This led to him being given his own show... in the 11pm-to-12am graveyard slot. He turned that into enough of a success that it launched Nicolle Wallace's broadcast career[[note]]She was given a plum afternoon slot on the strengh of her guest-anchoring stints and eventually was entrusted with an entire two-hour block to herself[[/note]] and allowed him to work through the 2020 presidential election and retire on his own terms when his contract expired -- with [=NBCUniversal=] forced to pay him the salary he'd negotiated as America's top-rated primetime network anchor the whole time.

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* In 1938, talented Soviet general Georgy Zhukov, who was seen as a threat to Stalin, was semi-exiled to the remote and irrelevant military post of commanding the First Soviet Mongolian Army Group, which was responsible for securing the southern border of Siberia. However, Japan picked that year to pick a fight with the Soviets, and instead of running into a force led by a drunken backwater incompetent they ran into one of the most brilliant generals of the 20th century. Oops. It did not go well for them, and Zhukov decisively-- decisively -- but quietly-- quietly -- crushed the Japanese forces, which forced them into a quiet non-aggression pact that secured the eastern flank of the Soviet Union until the end of World War II, which allowed them a free hand to deal with Nazi aggression in 1941.
* After investigations showed he'd embellished a number of news stories, Brian Williams was removed from NBC's flagship ''Nightly News'' program to being a "breaking news" anchor on the struggling MSNBC without any guaranteed air time.airtime. This was done in the hopes that he'd leave on his own volition and allow the network to avoid paying severance on his enormous contract. However, Williams toughed it out and proved that he could keep drawing in ratings MSNBC desperately needed. This led to him being given his own show... in the 11pm-to-12am graveyard slot. He turned that into enough of a success that it launched Nicolle Wallace's broadcast career[[note]]She was given a plum afternoon slot on the strengh strength of her guest-anchoring stints and eventually was entrusted with an entire two-hour block to herself[[/note]] and allowed him to work through the 2020 presidential election and retire on his own terms when his contract expired -- with [=NBCUniversal=] forced to pay him the salary he'd negotiated as America's top-rated primetime network anchor the whole time.

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** Tyrion Lannister was the subject of being TheUnfavourite his entire life, at one point he mentions that while his siblings were given positions of power, he was put in charge of looking after the sewers. He also notes that while, yes, it was a lowly function, at no other point in Casterly Rock's existence did the sewers work that smoothly and he was quite proud of it.

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** Aerys ordered [[Characters/ASongOfIceAndFireJaimeLannister Jaime Lannister]] into the Kingsguard to make him basically a hostage against Tywin Lannister, robbing him of his rightful heir, notwithstanding that Jaime had a mind of his own, had a tipping point for Aerys' craziness, was very well armed... and was left alone with the king.
** [[Characters/ASongOfIceAndFireTyrionLannister
Tyrion Lannister Lannister]] was the subject of being TheUnfavourite his entire life, at one point he mentions that while his siblings were given positions of power, he was put in charge of looking after the sewers. He also notes that while, yes, it was a lowly function, at no other point in Casterly Rock's existence did the sewers work that smoothly and he was quite proud of it.
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* ''Film/{{Interceptor}}''. Captain J.J. Collins accuses her superior at the Pentagon of sexual harassment, so becomes the subject of a hate campaign and gets reassigned to SBX-1, a weaponized sea platform in the middle of the ocean. Of course, terrorists attack the platform to knock out its interceptor missiles so they can launch nukes at the United States, and she becomes a national heroine for foiling their EvilPlan.

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* ''Film/{{Interceptor}}''.''Film/Interceptor2022''. Captain J.J. Collins accuses her superior at the Pentagon of sexual harassment, so becomes the subject of a hate campaign by her colleagues and gets reassigned to SBX-1, a weaponized sea platform in the middle of the ocean. Of course, Then terrorists attack the platform to knock out its interceptor missiles so they can launch nukes at the United States, and she becomes a national heroine for foiling their EvilPlan.
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* ''Film/{{Interceptor}}''. Captain J.J. Collins accuses her superior at the Pentagon of sexual harassment, so becomes the subject of a hate campaign and gets reassigned to SBX-1, a weaponized sea platform in the middle of the ocean. Of course, terrorists attack the platform to knock out its interceptor missiles so they can launch nukes at the United States, and she becomes a national heroine for foiling their EvilPlan.
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** In the intro to ''Wing Commander II'', Christopher Blair is accused of treason. There's no solid evidence against him, so the court martial only convicts him of negligence and demotes him, but Admiral Tolwyn remains convinced he's a traitor and reassigns him to a little backwater station. He then encounters the [[ProudWarriorRace Kilrathi]] in the area and is forced to save the day.

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** In the intro to ''Wing Commander II'', Christopher Blair is accused of treason. There's no solid evidence against him, so the court martial only convicts him of negligence and demotes him, but Admiral Tolwyn remains convinced he's a traitor and reassigns him to a little backwater station. He then Ten years later he encounters the [[ProudWarriorRace Kilrathi]] in the area and is forced to save the day.day, soon becoming the hero of another major campaign.
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* After investigations showed he'd embellished a number of news stories, Brian Williams was removed from NBC's flagship ''Nightly News'' program to being a "breaking news" anchor on the struggling MSNBC without any guaranteed air time. This was done in the hopes that he'd leave on his own volition and allow the network to avoid paying severance on his enormous contract. However, Williams toughed it out and proved that he could keep drawing in ratings MSNBC desperately needed. This led to him being given his own show... in the 11pm-to-12am graveyard slot. He turned that into enough of a success that it launched Nicolle Wallace's broadcast career[[note]]She was given a plum afternoon slot on the strengh of her guest-anchoring stints and eventually was entrusted with an entire two-hour block to herself[[/note]] and allowed him to work through the 2020 presidential election and retire on his own terms when his contract expired -- with [=NBCUniversal=] forced to pay him the salary he'd negotiated as a primetime network anchor the whole time.

to:

* After investigations showed he'd embellished a number of news stories, Brian Williams was removed from NBC's flagship ''Nightly News'' program to being a "breaking news" anchor on the struggling MSNBC without any guaranteed air time. This was done in the hopes that he'd leave on his own volition and allow the network to avoid paying severance on his enormous contract. However, Williams toughed it out and proved that he could keep drawing in ratings MSNBC desperately needed. This led to him being given his own show... in the 11pm-to-12am graveyard slot. He turned that into enough of a success that it launched Nicolle Wallace's broadcast career[[note]]She was given a plum afternoon slot on the strengh of her guest-anchoring stints and eventually was entrusted with an entire two-hour block to herself[[/note]] and allowed him to work through the 2020 presidential election and retire on his own terms when his contract expired -- with [=NBCUniversal=] forced to pay him the salary he'd negotiated as a America's top-rated primetime network anchor the whole time.
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* In ''Manga/SpyXFamily'', Henry Henderson was demoted after punching [[FatBastard Murdoch Swann]] for insulting and mocking Anya Forger to the point of tears, with Henry even realizing that he had become a little too hard about things lately. He seems to take his demotion and being in charge of the first-graders of Cecile Hall in stride, considering it an opportunity for him to rediscover and reignite his passion for teaching.
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* In Creator/LEModesittJr's SpaceOpera novel ''The Ethos Effect'' the main character, a former military spaceship commander responsible for a PR disaster (everyone knows he [[IDidWhatIHadToDo did what he had to do]], but being responsible for the loss of a large passenger ship doesn't make you popular) ends up being the "victim" of one of these; he's given a weird assignment that doesn't match his experience, working at an embassy on a planet he's completely unfamiliar with. He ends up foiling an assassination attempt targeting diplomats from multiple interstellar nations. [[spoiler:Which angers his superiors even more, because, as the main character eventually realizes, they were ''behind the assassination attempt'' and didn't intend for him to actually succeed at his job. In fact, they didn't even intend for him to survive the journey to the planet; the unidentified spaceship that attacked him en route was actually [[FalseFlagOperation one of their own ships]].]]

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* In Creator/LEModesittJr's SpaceOpera novel ''The Ethos Effect'' the main character, a former military spaceship commander responsible for a PR disaster (everyone knows he [[IDidWhatIHadToDo did what he had to do]], but being responsible for the loss of a large passenger ship doesn't make you popular) ends up being the "victim" of one of these; he's given a weird assignment that doesn't match his experience, working at an embassy on a planet he's completely unfamiliar with. He ends up foiling an assassination attempt targeting diplomats from multiple interstellar nations. [[spoiler:Which angers his superiors even more, because, as the main character eventually realizes, they were ''behind the assassination attempt'' and didn't intend for him to actually succeed at his job. In fact, they didn't even intend for him to [[UriahGambit survive the journey to the planet; planet]]; the unidentified spaceship that attacked him en route was actually [[FalseFlagOperation one of their own ships]].]]
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** It could also be said that Petiron wanted Robinton to be his own man and not be perceived as his father's son. He deliberately stepped out of the way to allow Robinton to become a better leader.
** Eh, by this time in the book, Petiron is the only harper who ''doesn't'' know that Robinton is a much better harper than he is.
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* ''ComicBook/XWingRogueSquadron'': Soontir Fel is banished to the 181st Fighter Group -- bad enough to be nicknamed the One-Eighty-''[[IncrediblyLamePun Worst]]'' -- and quickly transforms it into one of the Empire's most elite units.

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* ''ComicBook/XWingRogueSquadron'': Soontir Fel is banished to the 181st Fighter Group -- bad enough to be nicknamed the One-Eighty-''[[IncrediblyLamePun One-Eighty-''[[{{Pun}} Worst]]'' -- and quickly transforms it into one of the Empire's most elite units.
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* ''UsefulNotes/{{Iran}}'' has been suffering severely from the consequences of this for a while now. The Islamic Republic's constitution was a modified version of the monarchy, with the Shah's position filled by Ayatollah Khomeini, the new "Supreme Leader". Of course, despite having dictatorial powers over everything in the country, the supreme leader had no responsibilities whatsoever, with the task of actually running things placed on the government, which had both a President (democratically elected, out of the handful of candidates handpicked by the Leader) AND a Prime Minister (appointed by the President, but only with approval from the Parliament). During the early years, thanks to the devastating war with Iraq, the system was relatively closer to being a meritocracy, with the Prime Minister, who was the most involved in the matters of state, having the most influence. However, post-war President Akbar Hashemi lobbied to remove the Prime Minister position from the government, so he could have direct power as President. Then Khomeini died, leaving the Supreme Leader position vacant, which the Republic [[DidNotThinkThisThrough had not thought through]]. Hashemi strongarmed everyone involved to quickly promote the former President, Seyed Ali Khamenei to Supreme Leader, thinking the guy would be [[HorribleJudgeOfCharacter easy to control]] even though Khamenei didn't even have a clerical rank high enough to be able to hold that post. During Hashemi's two terms, and the two terms of his progressive successor, the Leader had become an irrelevant ceremonial position, but during the early 2000s Khamenei managed to turn the Revolutionary Guard into the most powerful military force in the Middle East, and himself into the an unquestionable invincible Orwellian ruler.

to:

* ''UsefulNotes/{{Iran}}'' has been suffering severely from the consequences of this for a while now. The Islamic Republic's constitution was a modified version of the monarchy, with the Shah's position filled by Ayatollah Khomeini, the new "Supreme Leader". Of course, despite having dictatorial powers over everything in the country, the supreme leader had no responsibilities whatsoever, with the task of actually running things placed on the government, which had both a President (democratically elected, out of the handful of candidates handpicked by the Leader) AND a Prime Minister (appointed by the President, but only with approval from the Parliament). During the early years, thanks to the devastating war with Iraq, the system was relatively closer to being a meritocracy, with the Prime Minister, who was the most involved in the matters of state, having the most influence. However, post-war President Akbar Hashemi lobbied to remove the Prime Minister position from the government, so he could have direct power as President. Then Khomeini died, leaving the Supreme Leader position vacant, which the Republic [[DidNotThinkThisThrough had not thought through]]. Hashemi strongarmed everyone involved to quickly promote the former President, Seyed Ali Khamenei to Supreme Leader, thinking the guy would be [[HorribleJudgeOfCharacter easy to control]] even though Khamenei didn't even have a clerical rank high enough to be able to hold that post. During Hashemi's two terms, and the two terms of his progressive successor, the Leader had become an irrelevant ceremonial position, but during the early 2000s Khamenei managed to turn the Revolutionary Guard into the most powerful military force in the Middle East, East (except Turkey, which takes its military dead seriously and has access to nuclear weapons through NATO membership, the latter point effectively making it untouchable in direct conflict), and himself into the an unquestionable invincible Orwellian ruler.
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* After investigations showed he'd embellished a number of news stories, Brian Williams was removed from NBC's flagship ''Nightly News'' program to being a "breaking news" anchor on the struggling MSNBC without any guaranteed air time. This was done in the hopes that he'd leave on his own volition and allow the network to avoid paying severance on his enormous contract. However, Williams toughed it out and proved that he could keep drawing in ratings MSNBC desperately needed. This led to him being given his own show...in the 11pm-to-12am graveyard slot. He turned that into enough of a success that it launched Nicolle Wallace's broadcast career[[note]]She was given a plum afternoon slot on the strengh of her guest-anchoring stints and eventually was entrusted with an entire two-hour block to herself[[/note]] and allowed him to work through the 2020 presidential election and retire on his own terms when his contract expired -- with [=NBCUniversal=] forced to pay him the salary he'd negotiated as a primetime network anchor the whole time.

to:

* After investigations showed he'd embellished a number of news stories, Brian Williams was removed from NBC's flagship ''Nightly News'' program to being a "breaking news" anchor on the struggling MSNBC without any guaranteed air time. This was done in the hopes that he'd leave on his own volition and allow the network to avoid paying severance on his enormous contract. However, Williams toughed it out and proved that he could keep drawing in ratings MSNBC desperately needed. This led to him being given his own show... in the 11pm-to-12am graveyard slot. He turned that into enough of a success that it launched Nicolle Wallace's broadcast career[[note]]She was given a plum afternoon slot on the strengh of her guest-anchoring stints and eventually was entrusted with an entire two-hour block to herself[[/note]] and allowed him to work through the 2020 presidential election and retire on his own terms when his contract expired -- with [=NBCUniversal=] forced to pay him the salary he'd negotiated as a primetime network anchor the whole time.
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* After investigations showed he'd embellished a number of news stories, Brian Williams was removed from NBC's flagship ''Nightly News'' program to being a "breaking news" anchor on the struggling MSNBC without any guaranteed air time. This was done in the hopes that he'd leave on his own volition and allow the network to avoid paying severance on his enormous contract. However, Williams toughed it out and proved that he could keep drawing in ratings MSNBC desperately needed. This led to him being given his own show...in the 11pm-to-12am graveyard slot. He turned that into enough of a success that it launched Nicolle Wallace's broadcast career[[note]]She was given a plum afternoon slot on the strengh of her guest-anchoring stints and eventually was entrusted with an entire two-hour block to herself[[/note]] and allowed him to work through the 2020 presidential election and retire on his own terms when his contract expired -- with [=NBCUniversal=] forced to pay him the salary he'd negotiated as a primetime network anchor the whole time.
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** Inverted by a fellow Commissar, Creator/SandyMitchell's Literature/CiaphasCain (HERO OF THE IMPERIUM), who ''wants'' a nice, comfortable out-of-the-way post in order to keep himself out of harm's way. He'll "heroically" volunteer for the most boring posting he can, only to somehow put himself in the most dangerous spot possible. Ironically, his tendency to find himself running up against seemingly impossible odds and [[IndyPloy triumphing by sheer dumb luck]] have earned him the status of a [[FakeUltimateHero Hero of the Imperium]], meaning he's ''expected'' to be at the front lines, facing enemy fire. From his perspective, he's now suffering the trope since he's forced to accept these assignments to keep up his reputation and not disappoint his friends and colleagues. A straight example is his aid, Gunner Jurgen. The malodorous soldier was originally assigned to Cain as a practical joke, but between his skill as a soldier and hidden AntiMagic abilities the arrangement became the foundation of Cain's rise to fame.

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** Inverted by a fellow Commissar, Creator/SandyMitchell's Literature/CiaphasCain (HERO OF THE IMPERIUM), who ''wants'' a nice, comfortable out-of-the-way post in order to keep himself out of harm's way. He'll "heroically" volunteer for the most boring posting he can, only to somehow put himself in the most dangerous spot possible. Ironically, his tendency to find himself running up against seemingly impossible odds and [[IndyPloy triumphing by sheer dumb luck]] have earned him the status of a [[FakeUltimateHero Hero of the Imperium]], meaning he's ''expected'' to be at the front lines, facing enemy fire. From his perspective, he's now suffering the trope since he's forced to accept these assignments to keep up his reputation and not disappoint his friends and colleagues. A straight example is his aid, aide, Gunner Jurgen. The malodorous soldier was originally assigned to Cain as a practical joke, but between his skill as a soldier and hidden AntiMagic abilities the arrangement became the foundation of Cain's rise to fame.
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* UsefulNotes/AndrewJackson appointed UsefulNotes/JamesBuchanan, an obscure former Pennsylvania Congressman, ambassador to Russia to get him out of Washington, saying that "If we kept a ministry at the North Pole, [[ReassignedToAntarctica I would have sent him there]]." Though Buchanan served (in this as in all things) without distinction, the appointment fooled other Democrats into believing he had foreign policy chops, which lead to a long string of lackluster diplomatic posts, including a stint as Secretary of State. When he ran for president in the chaotic three-way election of 1856, voters assumed this long history indicated competence, and Buchanan's frequent trips abroad meant he had never formed any strong opinions on slavery, immigration, or industrialization, so he didn't alienate as many voters as the Republican or Know-Nothing candidates and carried the day. And the nation then got [[BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor exactly what it had voted for]]: a milquetoast president without convictions, who spent four years letting the country work itself to the brink of war before leaving office just in time not to have to deal with the consequences. During his lame duck period he let several members of his cabinet get away with ''openly treasonous behavior'' in putting weapons into the hands of the already forming secessionist movement - despite the incoming Lincoln administration begging him to do something, ''anything'' to stop this madness. He also embarrassed himself by relying on exaggerated rumors and hearsay to order a completely unnecessary military march to the Utah Territory. The one time he ''did'' speak out on a current issue, endorsing the ruling in ''Dred Scott v. Sandford'' before it happened, it backfired spectacularly, as it even enraged Northerners who hadn't otherwise cared for the slavery issue one way or another before. He arguably also put his thumb on the scale, trying to convince the Court to give a ruling that "settled the issue once and for all" and trying to get at least one northern Justice to vote in favor of Chief Justice Taney's ruling. Buchanan is one of the two or three candidates for "worst President in history".

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* UsefulNotes/AndrewJackson appointed UsefulNotes/JamesBuchanan, an obscure former Pennsylvania Congressman, ambassador minister to Russia to get him out of Washington, saying that "If we kept a ministry at the North Pole, [[ReassignedToAntarctica I would have sent him there]]." Though Buchanan served (in this as in all things) without distinction, the appointment fooled other Democrats into believing he had foreign policy chops, which lead to a long string of lackluster diplomatic posts, including a stint stints as minister to the United Kingdom (then one of the top two diplomatic assignments, along with minister to France) and as Secretary of State. When he ran for president in the chaotic three-way election of 1856, voters assumed this long history indicated competence, and Buchanan's frequent trips abroad meant he had never formed any strong opinions on slavery, immigration, or industrialization, so he didn't alienate as many voters as the Republican or Know-Nothing candidates and carried the day. And the nation then got [[BeCarefulWhatYouWishFor exactly what it had voted for]]: a milquetoast president without convictions, who spent four years letting the country work itself to the brink of war before leaving office just in time not to have to deal with the consequences. During his lame duck period he let several members of his cabinet get away with ''openly treasonous behavior'' in putting weapons into the hands of the already forming secessionist movement - despite the incoming Lincoln administration begging him to do something, ''anything'' to stop this madness. He also embarrassed himself by relying on exaggerated rumors and hearsay to order a completely unnecessary military march to the Utah Territory. The one time he ''did'' speak out on a current issue, endorsing the ruling in ''Dred Scott v. Sandford'' before it happened, it backfired spectacularly, as it even enraged Northerners who hadn't otherwise cared for the slavery issue one way or another before. He arguably also put his thumb on the scale, trying to convince the Court to give a ruling that "settled the issue once and for all" and trying to get at least one northern Justice to vote in favor of Chief Justice Taney's ruling. Buchanan is one of the two or three candidates for "worst President in history".
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** UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt needed to lose his wartime VP, the left-wing firebrand Henry Wallace, for the 1944 election in order to keep the rest of the Democratic Party leadership happy. So his new running mate was obscure Missouri Senator UsefulNotes/HarrySTruman... who was Vice President for a grand total of 82 days before Roosevelt's long illness finally got the better of him. Truman was nearly two weeks into being President before he briefed for the ''very first time on the Manhattan Project''. The party leadership who had put him into office got antsy when Truman made three things clear: he would not abandon the New Deal social programs,[[note]]Which was expected and more or less fine on ideological and political terms--the New Deal was ''very'' popular--but seen as somewhat unrealistic given the Republican victory in the 1946 midterms[[/note]] he would pursue civil rights legislation over the objections of the Dixiecrats,[[note]]Which was completely unexpected, as White Missouri Democrats with Southern heritage like Truman (his mother's family in particular had backed the Confederacy during the Civil War) were usually segregationists; this naturally infuriated the Dixiecrats[[/note]] and he would not change his folksy-but-flinty personality to better "look the part" of president.[[note]]Which was possibly expected but still infuriated everyone anyway.[[/note]] The reassignment backfired on them when Truman defeated their handpicked primary candidate, and then won a ''four-way'' race[[note]]Besides the official Democratic candidate (Truman) and the Republican (New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey), that election saw Democratic splinter candidates from the left (the aforementioned Henry Wallace having established a new "Progressive Party" to advance his candidacy) and the right (the Dixiecrats having founded a "States' Rights Democratic Party" to nominate Strom Thurmond on a segregationist platform). There is a ''reason'' for that "[[AssumedWin Dewey Defeats Truman]]" headline, after all.[[/note]] for a second term, forcing the party leadership to accept his agenda.

to:

** UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt needed to lose his wartime VP, the left-wing firebrand Henry Wallace, for the 1944 election in order to keep the rest of the Democratic Party leadership happy. So his new running mate was obscure Missouri Senator UsefulNotes/HarrySTruman... who was Vice President for a grand total of 82 days before Roosevelt's long illness finally got the better of him. Truman was nearly two weeks into being President before he briefed for the ''very first time on the Manhattan Project''. The party leadership who had put him into office got antsy when Truman made three things clear: he would not abandon the New Deal social programs,[[note]]Which was expected and more or less fine on ideological and political terms--the New Deal was ''very'' popular--but seen as somewhat unrealistic given the Republican victory in the 1946 midterms[[/note]] he would pursue civil rights legislation over the objections of the Dixiecrats,[[note]]Which was completely unexpected, as White Missouri Democrats with Southern heritage like Truman (his mother's family in particular had backed the Confederacy during the Civil War) were usually segregationists; this naturally infuriated the Dixiecrats[[/note]] Dixiecrats. That said, this should ''not'' have been unexpected looking at Truman's personal history; he had always been as fair as possible to the Black community as a local elected official in Kansas City, and one of his earliest jobs in his personal life was as a Shabbos goy for KC-area Jewish families. (In the mid-1940s South, antisemitism and anti-Black racism went pretty hand-in-hand).[[/note]] and he would not change his folksy-but-flinty personality to better "look the part" of president.[[note]]Which was possibly expected but still infuriated everyone anyway.[[/note]] The reassignment backfired on them when Truman defeated their handpicked primary candidate, and then won a ''four-way'' race[[note]]Besides the official Democratic candidate (Truman) and the Republican (New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey), that election saw Democratic splinter candidates from the left (the aforementioned Henry Wallace having established a new "Progressive Party" to advance his candidacy) and the right (the Dixiecrats having founded a "States' Rights Democratic Party" to nominate Strom Thurmond on a segregationist platform). There is a ''reason'' for that "[[AssumedWin Dewey Defeats Truman]]" headline, after all.[[/note]] for a second term, forcing the party leadership to accept his agenda.
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** UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt needed to lose his wartime VP, the left-wing firebrand Henry Wallace, for the 1944 election in order to keep the rest of the Democratic Party leadership happy. So his new running mate was obscure Missouri Senator UsefulNotes/HarrySTruman... who was Vice President for a grand total of 82 days before Roosevelt's long illness finally got the better of him. Truman was nearly two weeks into being President before he briefed for the ''very first time on the Manhattan Project''. The party leadership who had put him into office got antsy when Truman made three things clear: he would not abandon the New Deal social programs,[[note]]Which was expected and more or less fine on ideological and political terms--the New Deal was ''very'' popular--but seen as somewhat unrealistic given the Republican victory in the 1946 midterms[[/note]] he would pursue civil rights legislation over the objections of the Dixiecrats,[[note]]Which was completely unexpected, as White Missouri Democrats with Southern heritage like Truman were usually segregationists; this naturally infuriated the Dixiecrats[[/note]] and he would not change his folksy-but-flinty personality to better "look the part" of president.[[note]]Which was possibly expected but still infuriated everyone anyway.[[/note]] The reassignment backfired on them when Truman defeated their handpicked primary candidate, and then won a ''four-way'' race[[note]]Besides the official Democratic candidate (Truman) and the Republican (New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey), that election saw Democratic splinter candidates from the left (the aforementioned Henry Wallace having established a new "Progressive Party" to advance his candidacy) and the right (the Dixiecrats having founded a "States' Rights Democratic Party" to nominate Strom Thurmond on a segregationist platform). There is a ''reason'' for that "[[AssumedWin Dewey Defeats Truman]]" headline, after all.[[/note]] for a second term, forcing the party leadership to accept his agenda.

to:

** UsefulNotes/FranklinDRoosevelt needed to lose his wartime VP, the left-wing firebrand Henry Wallace, for the 1944 election in order to keep the rest of the Democratic Party leadership happy. So his new running mate was obscure Missouri Senator UsefulNotes/HarrySTruman... who was Vice President for a grand total of 82 days before Roosevelt's long illness finally got the better of him. Truman was nearly two weeks into being President before he briefed for the ''very first time on the Manhattan Project''. The party leadership who had put him into office got antsy when Truman made three things clear: he would not abandon the New Deal social programs,[[note]]Which was expected and more or less fine on ideological and political terms--the New Deal was ''very'' popular--but seen as somewhat unrealistic given the Republican victory in the 1946 midterms[[/note]] he would pursue civil rights legislation over the objections of the Dixiecrats,[[note]]Which was completely unexpected, as White Missouri Democrats with Southern heritage like Truman (his mother's family in particular had backed the Confederacy during the Civil War) were usually segregationists; this naturally infuriated the Dixiecrats[[/note]] and he would not change his folksy-but-flinty personality to better "look the part" of president.[[note]]Which was possibly expected but still infuriated everyone anyway.[[/note]] The reassignment backfired on them when Truman defeated their handpicked primary candidate, and then won a ''four-way'' race[[note]]Besides the official Democratic candidate (Truman) and the Republican (New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey), that election saw Democratic splinter candidates from the left (the aforementioned Henry Wallace having established a new "Progressive Party" to advance his candidacy) and the right (the Dixiecrats having founded a "States' Rights Democratic Party" to nominate Strom Thurmond on a segregationist platform). There is a ''reason'' for that "[[AssumedWin Dewey Defeats Truman]]" headline, after all.[[/note]] for a second term, forcing the party leadership to accept his agenda.

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* ''WesternAnimation/TransformersAnimated'' plays with this. Optimus is assigned the unglamorous job of Space Bridge maintenance, but circumstances conspire to place him and his crew in the middle of events that could change the course of galactic history (and yes, this takes him to Earth). The thing is, Optimus wasn't assigned the crap job out of malice. It's just that with the disaster that lost Elita-1, Ultra Magnus had to make an example out of ''someone'', and with Optimus taking the blame, Ultra Magnus was bound by protocol to do that to him (him getting the assignment was Ultra Magnus pulling strings ''for'' Optimus). Played more straight with Bumblebee, as him taking the blame for Bulkhead's clumsiness led to [[TheNeidermeyer Sentinel Prime]] sending him to work for Optimus. Subverted with Bulkhead, as although he was given the crap job like Bumblebee, because Bulkhead loves Space Bridges, any excuse to work on them makes him happy. Being elevated to the heroes of Cybertron was just a bonus.

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* ''Franchise/{{Transformers}}'':
**
''WesternAnimation/TransformersAnimated'' plays with this. Optimus is assigned the unglamorous job of Space Bridge maintenance, but circumstances conspire to place him and his crew in the middle of events that could change the course of galactic history (and yes, this takes him to Earth). The thing is, Optimus wasn't assigned the crap job out of malice. It's just that with the disaster that lost Elita-1, Ultra Magnus had to make an example out of ''someone'', and with Optimus taking the blame, Ultra Magnus was bound by protocol to do that to him (him getting the assignment was Ultra Magnus pulling strings ''for'' Optimus). Played more straight with Bumblebee, as him taking the blame for Bulkhead's clumsiness led to [[TheNeidermeyer Sentinel Prime]] sending him to work for Optimus. Subverted with Bulkhead, as although he was given the crap job like Bumblebee, because Bulkhead loves Space Bridges, any excuse to work on them makes him happy. Being elevated to the heroes of Cybertron was just a bonus.
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* Sir UsefulNotes/IsaacNewton's tenure as Master of the Mint. At the time, the Mint was considered self-running, and the position as Master was a sinecure handed out to people like Newton so the Crown had an excuse to pay them a salary so that they, in turn, could do more interesting stuff like (in Newton's case) maths and astronomy. Newton, however, did what no one expected, and took the make-work job dead seriously. He cracked down hard on counterfeiters (with the infamous William Chaloner basically becoming his archnemesis during this period), invented the process of milling coin edges to make shaving coins impossible (preventing unwanted inflation), and tracked down and led raids on counterfeiters' workshops (even going undercover at pubs to find the counterfeiters). He was also a driving force in moving England away from a bimetallic currency standard, and onto a gold standard, a move which was about the only thing that prevented the economy of the British Isles from collapsing completely when the Spanish flooded the metal market with cheap New World gold (though this inadvertently caused issues later when England began to run out of silver to pay China for tea, leading to the Opium War). Sir Isaac was, in fact, knighted because of his work at the mint and not for his scientific endeavours, and his tomb in Westminster Abbey is adorned with financial motifs, not scientific ones.

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* Sir UsefulNotes/IsaacNewton's tenure as Master of the Mint. At the time, the Mint was considered self-running, and the position as Master was a sinecure handed out to people like Newton so the Crown had an excuse to pay them a salary so that they, in turn, could do more interesting stuff like (in Newton's case) maths and astronomy. Newton, however, did what no one expected, and took the make-work job dead seriously. He cracked down hard on counterfeiters (with the infamous William Chaloner basically becoming his archnemesis during this period), invented the process of milling coin edges to make shaving coins impossible (preventing unwanted inflation), and tracked down and led raids on counterfeiters' workshops (even going undercover at pubs to find the counterfeiters). [[https://coinsweekly.com/the-gold-standard-part-1-how-and-why-gold-became-the-most-important-metal-for-coins/ He was also a driving force force]] (if inadvertently so) in moving England away from a bimetallic currency standard, and onto a gold standard, a move which was about the only thing that prevented the economy of the British Isles from collapsing completely when the Spanish flooded the metal market with cheap New World gold (though this inadvertently caused issues later down the line -- because of the gold standard, silver coins generally went out of Britain, and when England they began to run out of silver to pay China for tea, leading to the Opium War).Wars began). Sir Isaac was, in fact, knighted because of his work at the mint and not for his scientific endeavours, and his tomb in Westminster Abbey is adorned with financial motifs, not scientific ones.
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* UsefulNotes/SirIsaacNewton's tenure as Master of the Mint. At the time, the Mint was considered self-running, and the position as Master was a sinecure handed out to people like Newton so the Crown had an excuse to pay them a salary so that they, in turn, could do more interesting stuff like (in Newton's case) maths and astronomy. Newton, however, did what no one expected, and took the make-work job dead seriously. He cracked down hard on counterfeiters (with the infamous William Chaloner basically becoming his archnemesis during this period), invented the process of milling coin edges to make shaving coins impossible (preventing unwanted inflation), and tracked down and led raids on counterfeiters' workshops (even going undercover at pubs to find the counterfeiters). He was also a driving force in moving England away from a bimetallic currency standard, and onto a gold standard, a move which was about the only thing that prevented the economy of the British Isles from collapsing completely when the Spanish flooded the metal market with cheap New World gold (though this inadvertently caused issues later when England began to run out of silver to pay China for tea, leading to the Opium War). Sir Isaac was, in fact, knighted because of his work at the mint and not for his scientific endeavours, and his tomb in Westminster Abbey is adorned with financial motifs, not scientific ones.

to:

* UsefulNotes/SirIsaacNewton's Sir UsefulNotes/IsaacNewton's tenure as Master of the Mint. At the time, the Mint was considered self-running, and the position as Master was a sinecure handed out to people like Newton so the Crown had an excuse to pay them a salary so that they, in turn, could do more interesting stuff like (in Newton's case) maths and astronomy. Newton, however, did what no one expected, and took the make-work job dead seriously. He cracked down hard on counterfeiters (with the infamous William Chaloner basically becoming his archnemesis during this period), invented the process of milling coin edges to make shaving coins impossible (preventing unwanted inflation), and tracked down and led raids on counterfeiters' workshops (even going undercover at pubs to find the counterfeiters). He was also a driving force in moving England away from a bimetallic currency standard, and onto a gold standard, a move which was about the only thing that prevented the economy of the British Isles from collapsing completely when the Spanish flooded the metal market with cheap New World gold (though this inadvertently caused issues later when England began to run out of silver to pay China for tea, leading to the Opium War). Sir Isaac was, in fact, knighted because of his work at the mint and not for his scientific endeavours, and his tomb in Westminster Abbey is adorned with financial motifs, not scientific ones.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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* Sir Isaac Newton's tenure as Master of the Mint. At the time, the Mint was considered self-running, and the position as Master was a sinecure handed out to people like Newton so the Crown had an excuse to pay them a salary so that they, in turn, could do more interesting stuff like (in Newton's case) maths and astronomy. Newton, however, did what no-one expected, and took the make-work job dead seriously. He cracked down hard on counterfeiters, invented the process of milling coin edges to make shaving coins impossible, and tracked down and led raids on counterfeiters' workshops. He was also a driving force in moving England away from a bimetallic currency standard, and onto a gold standard, a move which was about the only thing that prevented the economy of the British Isles from collapsing completely when the Spanish flooded the metal market with cheap New World gold. Sir Isaac was, in fact, knighted because of his work at the mint and not for his scientific endeavours, and his tomb in Westminster Abbey is adorned with financial motifs, not scientific ones.

to:

* Sir Isaac Newton's UsefulNotes/SirIsaacNewton's tenure as Master of the Mint. At the time, the Mint was considered self-running, and the position as Master was a sinecure handed out to people like Newton so the Crown had an excuse to pay them a salary so that they, in turn, could do more interesting stuff like (in Newton's case) maths and astronomy. Newton, however, did what no-one no one expected, and took the make-work job dead seriously. He cracked down hard on counterfeiters, counterfeiters (with the infamous William Chaloner basically becoming his archnemesis during this period), invented the process of milling coin edges to make shaving coins impossible, impossible (preventing unwanted inflation), and tracked down and led raids on counterfeiters' workshops. workshops (even going undercover at pubs to find the counterfeiters). He was also a driving force in moving England away from a bimetallic currency standard, and onto a gold standard, a move which was about the only thing that prevented the economy of the British Isles from collapsing completely when the Spanish flooded the metal market with cheap New World gold.gold (though this inadvertently caused issues later when England began to run out of silver to pay China for tea, leading to the Opium War). Sir Isaac was, in fact, knighted because of his work at the mint and not for his scientific endeavours, and his tomb in Westminster Abbey is adorned with financial motifs, not scientific ones.

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