Follow TV Tropes

Following

History Series / Wishbone

Go To

OR

Changed: 74

Removed: 398

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
moved to separate article


[[folder:#33: "Muttketeer" (''The Three Musketeers'' by Alexandre Dumas)]]

%%One tie-in book was released -- ''The Adventures of Wishbone'' #8: ''Muttketeer!'', a straight adaptation of the episode.

* AnimalGoesToSchool: Wishbone wants to go to school after his owner Joe goes back in to see his teacher's new computer, but the janitor tells him that dogs aren't allowed in school. When Wishbone sees a mouse lurking in the school, he has to go inside to stop it.

[[/folder]]

to:

[[folder:#33: "Muttketeer" (''The Three Musketeers'' by Alexandre Dumas)]]

%%One tie-in book was released -- ''The Adventures of Wishbone'' #8: ''Muttketeer!'', a straight adaptation of the episode.

* AnimalGoesToSchool: Wishbone wants to go to school after his owner Joe goes back in to see his teacher's new computer, but the janitor tells him that dogs aren't allowed in school. When Wishbone sees a mouse lurking in the school, he has to go inside to stop it.

[[/folder]]

Changed: 94

Removed: 1447

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
moved to separate article


[[folder:#22: "The Pawloined Paper" (''The Purloined Letter'' by Edgar Allan Poe)]]

%%One tie-in book was released -- ''The Adventures of Wishbone'' #11: ''The Pawloined Paper'', a straight adaptation of the episode.

* HiddenInPlainSight: Overlapping with NeedleInAStackOfNeedles, within the adaptation segments, the namesake letter is hidden in a stack of mail on the suspect's desk.
* HotForTeacher: Joe develops a crush on his young female history teacher. She [[spoiler:finds out, but merely corrects his spelling on a crossword he made of her name.]]
* NamedByTheAdaptation: In the original stories, Dupin's sidekick was unnamed. Here, he's given the name Claude.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: After Ms. Malloy confiscates a paper that Joe and Curtis are fighting over in class, she finds it was a crossword that Joe made of her name, and then uses the other side to write some assignments. Later, when she sees Joe at school after hours, having recognized Wishbone running through the school, she tells him he misspelled "excellent" but is flattered that he finds her "cool". All in all, a pretty reasonable response to a PrecociousCrush.

[[/folder]]



* ActuallyPrettyFunny: Ms. Gretchen Malloy can't help but smirk when she sees the whole school chasing after Wishbone, due to how fast he is. She tells Joe jokingly that he should be attending class.



%%[[folder:#45: "A Bone of Contention" (''The Courtship of Miles Standish'' by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)]]

to:

%%[[folder:#45: "A Bone %%[[folder:#46: "War of Contention" the Noses" (''The Courtship of Miles Standish'' Black Arrow'' by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)]]Robert Louis Stevenson)]]



%%[[folder:#46: "War of the Noses" (''The Black Arrow'' by Robert Louis Stevenson)]]
%%[[/folder]]
%%

Added: 203

Changed: 8

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* AdaptationalContextChange: Sydney Carton utters his famous line "It's a far, far better thing..." to the prison guard as he switches places with Charles. In the book, it is spoken as part of a monologue when he is taken to the guillotine.

to:

* AdaptationalContextChange: Sydney Carton utters his famous line "It's a far, far better thing..." to the prison guard as he switches places with Charles. Charles Darnay. In the book, it is spoken as part of a monologue when he is taken to the guillotine. guillotine.
* AdaptedOut: Sydney and Charles being {{Identical Stranger}}s, since Wishbone plays Charles and Sydney is played by a human actor. Thus in the switcheroo Sydney only says he will die in Charles's place.

Added: 99

Changed: 206

Removed: 85

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
episodes ordered incorrectly


%%[[folder:#44: "A Bone of Contention" (''The Courtship of Miles Standish'' by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)]]
%%[[/folder]]
%%
[[folder:#45: "Groomed for Greatness" (''Great Expectations'' by Charles Dickens)]]

to:

%%[[folder:#44: "A Bone of Contention" (''The Courtship of Miles Standish'' by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)]]
%%[[/folder]]
%%
[[folder:#45:
[[folder:#44: "Groomed for Greatness" (''Great Expectations'' by Charles Dickens)]]



%%[[folder:#46: "War of the Noses" (''The Black Arrow'' by Robert Louis Stevenson)]]

to:

%%[[folder:#46: "War %%[[folder:#45: "A Bone of the Noses" Contention" (''The Black Arrow'' Courtship of Miles Standish'' by Robert Louis Stevenson)]]Henry Wadsworth Longfellow)]]


Added DiffLines:

%%[[folder:#46: "War of the Noses" (''The Black Arrow'' by Robert Louis Stevenson)]]
%%[[/folder]]
%%

Changed: 88

Removed: 551

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
moved to separate article


* AcademicAlphaBitch: Sam's rival Amanda. For example, she spends most of "Sniffing the Gauntlet" gloating over how her team is going to win the class spelling bee.

to:

* AcademicAlphaBitch: Sam's rival Amanda. For example, she spends most of "Sniffing "[[Recap/WishboneS1E13SniffingTheGauntlet Sniffing the Gauntlet" Gauntlet]]" gloating over how her team is going to win the class spelling bee.



** Sam's rival Amanda is set up as this in "Sniffing the Gauntlet".

to:

** Sam's rival Amanda is set up as this in "Sniffing "[[Recap/WishboneS1E13SniffingTheGauntlet Sniffing the Gauntlet".Gauntlet]]."



[[folder:#13: "Sniffing the Gauntlet" (''Ivanhoe'' by Walter Scott)]]

%%Two tie-in books were released -- ''Wishbone Classics'' #12: ''Ivanhoe'', featuring a less compressed adaptation of the original story with comments by Wishbone rather than the modern-day segments; and ''The Adventures of Wishbone'' #20: ''Ivanhound'', a straight adaptation of the episode.

* AdaptationTitleChange: While the episode is titled "Sniffing the Gauntlet", the novelization (from the ''The Adventures of Wishbone'' book series) is instead titled "Ivanhound".

[[/folder]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

%%''Robinhound Crusoe'' is book 4 of the spinoff ''The Adventures of Wishbone'' series, done in the parallel-plots style of the show.


Added DiffLines:

%%''Gullifur's Travels'' is book 18 of the spinoff ''The Adventures of Wishbone'' series, done in the parallel-plots style of the show.


Added DiffLines:

%%''The Haunted Clubhouse'' is book 2 of the spinoff ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' series, in which Wishbone does ''not'' imagine himself into the classic story; instead, sub-plots are included in which Joe, and occasionally Sam or David, would read a mystery story that turns out to be related to the current events in their lives.


Added DiffLines:

%%''Riddle of the Wayward Books'' is book 3 of the spinoff ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' series, in which Wishbone does ''not'' imagine himself into the classic story; instead, sub-plots are included in which Joe, and occasionally Sam or David, would read a mystery story that turns out to be related to the current events in their lives.


Added DiffLines:

%%''Case of the On-Line Alien'' is book 9 of the spinoff ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' series, in which Wishbone does ''not'' imagine himself into the classic story; instead, sub-plots are included in which Joe, and occasionally Sam or David, would read a mystery story that turns out to be related to the current events in their lives.


Added DiffLines:

%%''Forgotten Heroes'' is book 12 of the spinoff ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' series, in which Wishbone does ''not'' imagine himself into the classic story; instead, sub-plots are included in which Joe, and occasionally Sam or David, would read a mystery story that turns out to be related to the current events in their lives.


Added DiffLines:

%%''Case of the Unsolved Case'' is book 13 of the spinoff ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' series, in which Wishbone does ''not'' imagine himself into the classic story; instead, sub-plots are included in which Joe, and occasionally Sam or David, would read a mystery story that turns out to be related to the current events in their lives.


Added DiffLines:

%%''Disoriented Express'' is book 14 of the spinoff ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' series, in which Wishbone does ''not'' imagine himself into the classic story; instead, sub-plots are included in which Joe, and occasionally Sam or David, would read a mystery story that turns out to be related to the current events in their lives.


Added DiffLines:

%%''Stage Invader'' is book 15 of the spinoff ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' series, in which Wishbone does ''not'' imagine himself into the classic story; instead, sub-plots are included in which Joe, and occasionally Sam or David, would read a mystery story that turns out to be related to the current events in their lives.


Added DiffLines:

%%''The Ghost of Camp Ka Nowato'' is book 2 of the ''The Wishbone Super Mysteries'' series, double-length books done in the style of the parent ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' series, in which Wishbone does ''not'' imagine himself into the classic story; instead, sub-plots are included in which Joe, and occasionally Sam or David, would read a mystery story that turns out to be related to the current events in their lives.

Changed: 264

Removed: 281

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* AnimalGoesToSchool: In "Muttketeer", Wishbone wants to go to school after his owner Joe goes back in to see his teacher's new computer, but the janitor tells him that dogs aren't allowed in school. When Wishbone sees a mouse lurking in the school, he has to go inside to stop it.




to:

* AnimalGoesToSchool: Wishbone wants to go to school after his owner Joe goes back in to see his teacher's new computer, but the janitor tells him that dogs aren't allowed in school. When Wishbone sees a mouse lurking in the school, he has to go inside to stop it.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
splitting off


* FriendlyEnemy: Wanda is this to Wishbone. As long as he isn't digging up her lawn, she is very amicable to him.



* SitcomArchNemesis: Wishbone tended to regard Wanda this way. Wanda was actually pretty friendly though and was just annoyed by having her neighbor's dog constantly wrecking her yard. Wishbone and Wanda came to terms somewhat in "Fleabitten Bargain", where he actually ended up inside her house, but subsequent episodes followed this up with AesopAmnesia since StatusQuoIsGod.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
splitting off


* AcademicAthlete: Samantha “Sam” Kepler participates in every sport her male friends do and is picked for her class team captain spelling bee because she's always reading.



* AllGirlsLikePonies: Sam Kepler loves horses. "Salty Dog" centers on her finding an alleged lucky horseshoe in an abandoned barn. She also has a treasured glass unicorn.



* CharacterCatchphrase: Wishbone's are "Hellooo!" and "Whoocha!"



* DeadpanSnarker: Wishbone, though none of the humans can understand him. Kind of like ComicStrip/{{Garfield}}.
* DetectiveAnimal: Wishbone has played the role of Franchise/SherlockHolmes in "Literature/TheHoundOfTheBaskervilles" and "A Scandal in Bohemia", and Literature/CAugusteDupin in "Literature/ThePurloinedLetter".
* DisappearedDad: Joe's father died of a rare blood disease when Joe himself was six.



* HalfDressedCartoonAnimal: Not a cartoon, but only Wishbone's top half is dressed when he appears costumed.
** Averted in "A Tale in Twain" where Wishbone is fully dressed in Tom's clothes, and there are probably other examples.
* HerCodeNameWasMarySue: Wishbone narrating the week's story tends to refer to the character he plays as "dashingly handsome" and such. It helps that he usually plays TheHero.
* HeroicDog: Wishbone has done some pretty cool feats. They include stopping a bulldozer from taking down an ancient tree in the parks -- by getting caught in it and the operator gets him down before the dog can get hurt -- as well as infiltrating a thief's hideout to save Wanda's flamingo; leading the kids to a Bloodhound framing him; getting the adults for help when Joe, Sam and David are trapped in a barn; and showing Sam the sabotaged bleacher in ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader''. He's a good boy.



* MissingMom: Sam's parents are divorced, and she lives with her father. It's mentioned she visits her mother, but she's never shown. David's the only one of the main kids with an intact family.



* OneOfTheBoys: Sam, natch.
* OohMeAccentsSlipping: Often in earlier episodes. And occasionally done deliberately, as Wishbone will drop whatever accent he's adopted for his character to make a snarky comment.
* PassionateSportsGirl: Sam participates in every sport her male friends do and would much rather be taking karate lessons than dance lessons.



* TheSmartGuy: David Barnes.



* TomboyishName: Or nickname, rather -- Samantha Kepler goes by "Sam" for short.
* TragicKeepsake:
** Joe has a basketball card from his dad. It gets stolen in one episode.
** Wishbone himself serves as this for Joe as well, as revealed in the tie-in novels. When Joe was around six years old, he made a wish on a wishbone for a puppy. Shortly after, his dad gave him Wishbone as a pet.
** Sam has a glass unicorn that was the last gift she received from her parents before their divorce. She's notably (though subduedly) sad talking about it and horrified at the prospect of it being broken.



* VentriloquistAnimal: The protagonist Wishbone doesn't move his mouth when talking.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

[[folder:''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #12: ''Forgotten Heroes'']]

* GottaCatchThemAll: A self-imposed version -- the plot kicks off when Joe goes to a yard sale and finds a set of old baseball cards. When questioned by the owner, he explains that he'd inherited his late father's own cards and wanted to keep adding to the collection, including filling in some of the gaps in his father's favorite teams.
* SinsOfOurFathers: Variant -- at one point, Joe has a daydream where he shows up at a Negro League game to find every single person glaring at him, not because of his family's actions but simply because he's white and therefore a member of the race that's caused so much trouble for their people. He's noticeably rattled by it when he snaps out of it.

[[/folder]]

Added: 522

Changed: 3310

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Fixed up some examples.


* HeroicDog: Wishbone has done some pretty cool feats. They include stopping a bulldozer from taking down an ancient tree in the parks -- by getting caught in it and the operator gets him down before the dog can get hurt -- as well as infiltrating a thief's hideout to save Wanda's flamingo; leading the kids to a Bloodhound framing him; getting the adults for help when Joe, Sam and David are trapped in a barn; and showing Sam the sabotaged bleacher in ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader''. He's a good boy.



* GrumpyOldMan: Hubert starts out as this in "Golden Retrieved", but taking care of the lost Wishbone helps him to grow out of it.
* KickTheMoralityPet: In "Golden Retrieved", Joe is obsessed with a new bike and ties Wishbone to a tree while testing it out since Wishbone can't keep up. Wishbone escapes to play with a Golden Retriever, leaving behind his tags in the process. Joe notably looks regretful while putting up "Lost Dog" signs the next day.
* TakeAThirdOption: In "Golden Retrieved", Joe wants to test out a new bike, but Wishbone can't keep up, there's no basket for him to ride, and leaving him tied to a tree leads to Wishbone slipping out of his collar and getting lost. When Joe finds out that an old man named Hubert saved his dog, he allows Wishbone to hang out with Hubert so that Hubert gets the companionship he needs and Joe can safely test his bike without worrying about Wishbone disappearing.

to:

* GrumpyOldMan: Hubert starts out as this in "Golden Retrieved", this, but taking care of the lost Wishbone helps him to grow out of it.
* KickTheMoralityPet: In "Golden Retrieved", Joe is obsessed with a new bike and ties Wishbone to a tree while testing it out since Wishbone can't keep up. Wishbone escapes to play with a Golden Retriever, leaving behind his tags in the process. Joe notably looks regretful while putting up "Lost Dog" signs the next day.
* TakeAThirdOption: In "Golden Retrieved", Joe wants to test out a new bike, but Wishbone can't keep up, there's no basket for him to ride, and leaving him tied to a tree leads to Wishbone slipping out of his collar and getting lost. When Joe finds out that an old man named Hubert saved his dog, he allows Wishbone to hang out with Hubert so that Hubert gets the companionship he needs and Joe can safely test his bike without worrying about Wishbone disappearing.



* {{Bowdlerize}}: They didn't show the beheadings in ''Literature/ATaleOfTwoCities'', but they did show [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything a cabbage being cut in half by the guillotine]], with several of the characters in the background staring at it in horror.

to:

* {{Bowdlerize}}: They didn't show the beheadings in ''Literature/ATaleOfTwoCities'', the ''Literature/ATaleOfTwoCities'' segments, but they did show [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything a cabbage being cut in half by the guillotine]], with several of the characters in the background staring at it in horror.



* SequelHook: InUniverse, when Scheherazade finishes the story of Ali Baba, she and her sister mention she knows many more tales, naming a few (such as ''Aladdin'', ''The Enchanted Horse'' and ''Sinbad'')... and the Sultan, who's intrigued and wants to hear them, can't think of a way to fit her execution onto the schedule. Ultimately, he just cancels it and asks her to start telling her next story.

to:

* SequelHook: InUniverse, when A variant InUniverse -- after Scheherazade finishes the story of Ali Baba, she and her sister mention she knows many more tales, naming a few (such as ''Aladdin'', ''The Enchanted Horse'' and ''Sinbad'')... and the Sultan, who's intrigued and wants to hear them, can't think of a way to fit her execution onto the schedule. Ultimately, he just cancels it and asks her to start telling her next story.



* HotForTeacher: In "The Pawloined Paper" Joe develops a crush on his young female history teacher. She [[spoiler:finds out, but merely corrects his spelling on a crossword he made of her name.]]
* NamedByTheAdaptation: In the "Purloined Letter" episode, Dupin's sidekick (unnamed in the original stories) is given the name Claude.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: In "The Pawloined Paper", Ms. Malloy confiscates a paper that Joe and Curtis are fighting over in class. She apparently found it it was a crossword that Joe made of her name, but uses the other side to write some assignments. Later, when she sees Joe at school after hours, having recognized Wishbone running through the school, she tells him he misspelled "excellent" but is flattered that he finds her "cool". All in all, a pretty reasonable response to a PrecociousCrush.

to:

* HotForTeacher: In "The Pawloined Paper" Joe develops a crush on his young female history teacher. She [[spoiler:finds out, but merely corrects his spelling on a crossword he made of her name.]]
* NamedByTheAdaptation: In the "Purloined Letter" episode, original stories, Dupin's sidekick (unnamed in the original stories) is was unnamed. Here, he's given the name Claude.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: In "The Pawloined Paper", After Ms. Malloy confiscates a paper that Joe and Curtis are fighting over in class. She apparently found it class, she finds it was a crossword that Joe made of her name, but and then uses the other side to write some assignments. Later, when she sees Joe at school after hours, having recognized Wishbone running through the school, she tells him he misspelled "excellent" but is flattered that he finds her "cool". All in all, a pretty reasonable response to a PrecociousCrush.



* SpitTake: Sam does a rather spectacular one in "Furst Impressions" after it is pointed out to Joe that his dress shirt is both on inside out and on backwards. Wishbone even comments "EW! It went up her nose!"

to:

* SpitTake: Sam does a rather spectacular one in "Furst Impressions" after it is pointed out to Joe that his dress shirt is both on inside out and on backwards. Wishbone even comments "EW! It went up her nose!"



* ApologyGift: In "The Count's Account", as an apology for accidentally getting Wishbone covered in pink dye (long story), David makes him a personalized vending machine that goes him a treat every time he presses the lever. Wishbone takes to it.
* {{Bowdlerize}}: For ''Literature/TheCountOfMonteCristo'', Fernand isn't DrivenToSuicide by his reputation being slandered.
* CompressedAdaptation: The episode about ''Literature/TheCountOfMonteCristo'' spends a bit too much time on the story's setup, forcing Danglars and Caderrouse to become a case of WhatHappenedToTheMouse as Dantes' revenge is directed entirely against Fernand. This is even after removing Villefort entirely.

to:

* ApologyGift: In "The Count's Account", as As an apology for accidentally getting Wishbone covered in pink dye (long story), David makes him a personalized vending machine that goes him a treat every time he presses the lever. Wishbone takes to it.
* {{Bowdlerize}}: For ''Literature/TheCountOfMonteCristo'', In the ''Literature/TheCountOfMonteCristo'' segments, Fernand isn't DrivenToSuicide by his reputation being slandered.
* CompressedAdaptation: The episode about ''Literature/TheCountOfMonteCristo'' spends a bit too much time on the story's setup, forcing Danglars and Caderrouse to become a case of WhatHappenedToTheMouse as Dantes' revenge is directed entirely against Fernand. This is even after removing Villefort entirely.



* NiceJobBreakingItHero: In "Little Big Dog", David taking his mother's new car out for a joyride despite being underage leads to him knocking off the rearview mirror.
* TerribleIntervieweesMontage: The musicians auditioning for King Saul in "Little Big Dog", to help cure his headache. They subvert GiftedlyBad, but the horns, flutes and bass instruments are inappropriate for the soothing melody he wants. One duo ''nearly'' wins the audition, but their melody is a BrokenRecord that gets annoying after a while.
* WatchThePaintJob: In "Little Big Dog", David's father gives his mother a brand new convertible. David proceeds to test-drive it despite being underage and breaks off the side-view mirror while backing it out of the driveway.
* YouAreGrounded: In "Little Big Dog", David's parents tell him after he confesses to damaging his mother's new car on an impulse. With that said, they do tell him SoProudOfYou for coming clean about it instead of letting his father blame it on the dealership.

to:

* NiceJobBreakingItHero: In "Little Big Dog", David taking takes his mother's new car out for a joyride despite being underage underage, which leads to him knocking off the rearview mirror.
* TerribleIntervieweesMontage: The musicians auditioning for King Saul in "Little Big Dog", to help cure his headache. They subvert GiftedlyBad, but the horns, flutes and bass instruments are inappropriate for the soothing melody he wants. One duo ''nearly'' wins the audition, but their melody is a BrokenRecord that gets annoying after a while.
* WatchThePaintJob: In "Little Big Dog", David's father gives his mother a brand new convertible. David proceeds to test-drive it despite being underage and breaks off the side-view mirror while backing it out of the driveway.
* YouAreGrounded: In "Little Big Dog", David's parents tell him this after he confesses to damaging his mother's new car on an impulse. With that said, they do tell him they're SoProudOfYou for coming clean about it instead of letting his father blame it on the dealership.



* AcquiredSituationalNarcissism: In "A Terrified Terrier", Joe has a spell of this when some cool kids see his jump shots and invite him to hang out with them, albeit in the YouGetMeCoffee situation. He ends up ignoring Wishbone, Robin, Sam, and David.
* BloodlessCarnage: Averted slightly with the ''Red Badge of Courage'' episode, wherein Wishbone plays protagonist Henry Fleming. He's said to get grazed with a bullet; what we see is a bandage with a red smear.
* KickTheMoralityPet: In "A Terrified Terrier", Joe does this to Wishbone, Sam, David and Robin when he hangs out with a bunch of cool kids. His mother even calls him out for this. Said kids make fun of Sam and David for doing homework at a pizza parlor, saying their birdsong recordings are "geek mating calls". Joe doesn't laugh, and the next day he ditches the "cool kids" to chase after Sam and David to apologize.
* SleevesAreForWimps: "A Terrified Terrier" has Joe cutting all the sleeves off his shirts in an ill-considered attempt to join a group of "cool" kids. Wishbone asks "So, why don't we like sleeves anymore?"

to:

* AcquiredSituationalNarcissism: In "A Terrified Terrier", Joe has a spell of this when some cool kids see his jump shots and invite him to hang out with them, albeit in the YouGetMeCoffee situation. He ends up ignoring Wishbone, Robin, Sam, and David.
* BloodlessCarnage: Averted slightly with in the ''Red Badge of Courage'' episode, ''Literature/TheRedBadgeOfCourage'' segments, wherein Wishbone plays protagonist Henry Fleming. He's said to get grazed with a bullet; what we see is a bandage with a red smear.
* KickTheMoralityPet: In "A Terrified Terrier", Joe does this to Wishbone, Sam, David and Robin when he hangs out with a bunch of cool kids. His mother even calls him out for this. Said kids make fun of Sam and David for doing homework at a pizza parlor, saying their birdsong recordings are "geek mating calls". Joe doesn't laugh, and the next day he ditches the "cool kids" to chase after Sam and David to apologize.
* SleevesAreForWimps: "A Terrified Terrier" has Joe starts cutting all the sleeves off his shirts in an ill-considered attempt to join a group of "cool" kids. Wishbone asks "So, why don't we like sleeves anymore?"



* CompressedAdaptation: The Hercules episode only covers one of the twelve labors, the one with the golden apples. King Eurystheus makes a passing reference to the previous labor (the one with Geryon's cattle), but we see nothing of it.
* JerkassGods: In "Hercules and the Golden Apples" it's mentioned that Zeus chained up Prometheus for giving fire to mortals. Despite the fact that Zeus is his father, Hercules frees Prometheus in a case of ScrewTheRulesImDoingWhatsRight.

to:

* CompressedAdaptation: The Hercules episode only covers one of the twelve labors, the one with the golden apples. King Eurystheus makes a passing reference to the previous labor (the one with Geryon's cattle), but we see nothing of it.
* JerkassGods: In "Hercules and the Golden Apples" it's It's mentioned that Zeus chained up Prometheus for giving fire to mortals. Despite the fact that Zeus is his father, Hercules frees Prometheus in a case of ScrewTheRulesImDoingWhatsRight.



* AcquiredSituationalNarcissism: "Rushin' to the Bone" averts it with Wishbone winning the part for Mr. [=MacPooch=], but justified in that Wishbone wanted to BeYourself and only did his best at the audition to show off and make Joe happy. He chokes his performance during filming because of [[SelfParody the costume he's wearing and his "voice actor".]]
* EmbarrassinglyDresslikeOutfit: In "Rushin' to the Bone", Wishbone auditions to be the new "Mr. [=McPooch=]", the ostensibly Scottish mascot for his brand of kibble. He is extremely miffed at having to wear a kilt for the role, repeatedly calling it "a dress".
* NeverWorkWithChildrenOrAnimals: Invoked in "Rushin' to the Bone", where Wishbone shows he's a tough actor to work with, being a house dog who [[SelfParody has never worn an outfit or having a voice actor]]. Joe realizes this more quickly than the director does and takes Wishbone home, though it means Wishbone is no longer the Mister [=MacPooch=] mascot.
* SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome: In "Rushin' to the Bone", when Wishbone wins the part of Mr. [=MacPooch=], a mascot for a food brand, NeverWorkWithChildrenOrAnimals is invoked in full force. He takes offense at having to wear a dress, and at having a voice actor and thus ignores the stage directions.

to:

* AcquiredSituationalNarcissism: "Rushin' to the Bone" averts it Averted with Wishbone winning the part for Mr. [=MacPooch=], but justified in that Wishbone wanted to BeYourself and only did his best at the audition to show off and make Joe happy. He chokes his performance during filming because of [[SelfParody the costume he's wearing and his "voice actor".]]
* EmbarrassinglyDresslikeOutfit: In "Rushin' to the Bone", Wishbone auditions to be the new "Mr. [=McPooch=]", the ostensibly Scottish mascot for his brand of kibble. He is extremely miffed at having to wear a kilt for the role, repeatedly calling it "a dress".
* NeverWorkWithChildrenOrAnimals: Invoked in "Rushin' to the Bone", where -- Wishbone shows he's a tough actor to work with, being a house dog who [[SelfParody has never worn an outfit or having a voice actor]]. Joe realizes this more quickly than the director does and takes Wishbone home, though it means Wishbone is no longer the Mister [=MacPooch=] mascot.
* SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome: In "Rushin' to the Bone", when When Wishbone wins the part of Mr. [=MacPooch=], a mascot for a food brand, NeverWorkWithChildrenOrAnimals is invoked in full force. He takes offense at having to wear a dress, dress (actually a kilt) and at having a voice actor and thus ignores the stage directions.



* AcquiredSituationalNarcissism: In "Groomed for Greatness", David gets this when working with Wanda's cousin, an artist, and adopting her arrogant attitude briefly. He grows out of it when the artist leaves town without building the statue she was commissioned to do, and Wanda does it instead.

to:

* AcquiredSituationalNarcissism: In "Groomed for Greatness", David gets this when working with Wanda's cousin, an artist, and adopting her arrogant attitude briefly. He grows out of it when the artist leaves town without building the statue she was commissioned to do, and Wanda does it instead.



* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: In the adaptation of "The Moonstone", Rachel has this reaction when the investigator recreates what happened the night of the theft and gives Franklin a draught to help with that. It turns out Franklin was sleepwalking that night, and he does it again, taking out the case with the diamond while mumbling about giving it to Rachel. Rachel says she saw him do it and was angry at him for loving a diamond more than her. She apologizes to his sleeping form for having misjudged him. The inspector deems that Franklin is innocent because logically if he was collapsed, the Moonstone should have remained with him when he woke up. Someone else took it from him.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: The inspector in "The Moonstone". He points out that everyone in the house the night of the theft is a suspect, but doesn't move to make accusations while analyzing Rosanna or Godfrey's possible motivations. Instead, he gathers the evidence such as that the suspect must have smudged drying paint; when Franklin shows him his own nightgown stained with paint but says he doesn't know what happened that night, the inspector helps recreate the events with a sleeping draught. This ends up clearing Franklin's name since he was sleepwalking when he removed the Moonstone from the cabinet, and the inspector points out that someone must have taken it from him after Franklin collapsed on the floor.
* SparedByTheAdaptation: Rosanna in ''The Moonstone'' doesn't commit suicide after hiding the evidence that Franklin is the most likely suspect for the crime. Instead, she goes away, and her DearJohnLetter is a mere AnguishedDeclarationOfLove.
* WhamShot: In "Moonbone", A photograph reveals that Wishbone stole an athlete's ring. [[spoiler:The full moon compels him to bury things, apparently.]]
* WhatTheHellHero: In "Moonbone", Joe to Wishbone for taking an athlete's ring and burying it. Wishbone says, "I feel so guilty. And dirty."

to:

* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: In the adaptation of "The Moonstone", Moonstone" segments, Rachel has this reaction when the investigator recreates what happened the night of the theft and gives Franklin a draught to help with that. It turns out Franklin was sleepwalking that night, and he does it again, taking out the case with the diamond while mumbling about giving it to Rachel. Rachel says she saw him do it and was angry at him for loving a diamond more than her. She apologizes to his sleeping form for having misjudged him. The inspector deems that Franklin is innocent because logically if he was collapsed, the Moonstone should have remained with him when he woke up. Someone else took it from him.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: The inspector in the "The Moonstone".Moonstone" segments. He points out that everyone in the house the night of the theft is a suspect, but doesn't move to make accusations while analyzing Rosanna or Godfrey's possible motivations. Instead, he gathers the evidence such as that the suspect must have smudged drying paint; when Franklin shows him his own nightgown stained with paint but says he doesn't know what happened that night, the inspector helps recreate the events with a sleeping draught. This ends up clearing Franklin's name since he was sleepwalking when he removed the Moonstone from the cabinet, and the inspector points out that someone must have taken it from him after Franklin collapsed on the floor.
* SparedByTheAdaptation: In the ''Literature/TheMoonstone'' segments, Rosanna in ''The Moonstone'' doesn't commit suicide after hiding the evidence that Franklin is the most likely suspect for the crime. Instead, she goes away, and her DearJohnLetter is a mere AnguishedDeclarationOfLove.
* WhamShot: In "Moonbone", A photograph reveals that Wishbone stole an athlete's ring. [[spoiler:The [[spoiler: The full moon compels him to bury things, apparently.]]
* WhatTheHellHero: In "Moonbone", Joe to ends up scolding Wishbone for taking an athlete's ring and burying it.it, causing a great deal of trouble. Wishbone says, "I feel so guilty. And dirty."



* AngerBornOfWorry: The scene where Jimmy and Marcus accidentally start a fire at Pepper Pete's in "Barking at Buddha". They run away as the fire alarm starts, with Jimmy saying they probably burned the whole building down. Travis then comes to find the boys before they can run away or hide in the park forever, with Marcus apologizing. It turns out his uncle was both worried that he and Jimmy had gotten hurt and disappointed that they did something so irresponsible.
* {{Bowdlerize}}: In the ''Literature/JourneyToTheWest'' episode, Sun Wukong leaves a paw-print on the Buddha's finger instead of [[ToiletHumor urinating on his finger]], as he did in the original story.
* HeroicDog: Wishbone in "Barking at Buddha" wishes that he were one, but he has done some pretty cool feats. They include stopping a bulldozer from taking down an ancient tree in the parks -- by getting caught in it and the operator gets him down before the dog can get hurt -- as well as infiltrating a thief's hideout to save Wanda's flamingo; leading the kids to a Bloodhound framing him; getting the adults for help when Joe, Sam and David are trapped in a barn; and showing Sam the sabotaged bleacher in ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader''. He's a good boy.

to:

* AngerBornOfWorry: The scene where Jimmy and Marcus accidentally start a fire at Pepper Pete's in "Barking at Buddha".Pete's. They run away as the fire alarm starts, with Jimmy saying they probably burned the whole building down. Travis then comes to find the boys before they can run away or hide in the park forever, with Marcus apologizing. It turns out his uncle was both worried that he and Jimmy had gotten hurt and disappointed that they did something so irresponsible.
* {{Bowdlerize}}: In the ''Literature/JourneyToTheWest'' episode, original story of ''Literature/JourneyToTheWest'', Sun Wukong [[ToiletHumor urinates on the Buddha's finger]]. In this version, he merely leaves a paw-print on the Buddha's finger instead of [[ToiletHumor urinating on his finger]], as he did in the original story.
finger.
* HeroicDog: InUniverse, Wishbone in "Barking at Buddha" wishes that he were one, but he has done some pretty cool feats. They include stopping a bulldozer from taking down an ancient tree one in the parks -- by getting caught in it and the operator gets him down before the dog can get hurt -- as well as infiltrating a thief's hideout to save Wanda's flamingo; leading the kids to a Bloodhound framing him; getting the adults for help when Joe, Sam and David are trapped in a barn; and showing Sam the sabotaged bleacher in ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader''. He's a good boy.
this episode.



* {{Bowdlerize}}: The ''Literature/{{Aeneid}}'' episode omits Dido's suicide, only showing Aeneas leaving her behind in Carthage.
* DivineChessboard: In "The Aeneid" the Gods use a diorama of the Mediterranean to decide the fate of mortals. Jupiter and Venus use it to help and guide Aeneas to his destiny; Juno uses it to make his and the lives of his fellow Trojans as miserable as possible.
* EveryoneWentToSchoolTogether: In "The Roamin' Nose", Joe's Mom, David's parents and Wanda reminisce about their high school years. They mention that Damont's Dad went to high school with them too.
* JerkassGods: In "The Aeneid", Juno makes life miserable for the Trojans because she can. (Apparently left out is the fact that she hated all Trojans because of Paris's preferring Venus over Juno and Minerva, but especially hated this particular group of Trojans because their descendants were destined to destroy her favorite city of Carthage, which was still being built at the time the story took place.)
* SparedByTheAdaptation: Dido in ''The Aeneid'' doesn't commit suicide, as far as we know. This is because Aeneas is nicer here than in the original source, honestly telling her that the gods have ordered him to leave. He says that he would stay if he could and that Dido will always be in his heart. Their farewell is thus more civil if a GutPunch for the viewers.

to:

* {{Bowdlerize}}: The ''Literature/{{Aeneid}}'' episode omits segments omit Dido's suicide, only showing Aeneas leaving her behind in Carthage.
* DivineChessboard: In "The Aeneid" segments the Gods use a diorama of the Mediterranean to decide the fate of mortals. Jupiter and Venus use it to help and guide Aeneas to his destiny; Juno uses it to make his and the lives of his fellow Trojans as miserable as possible.
* EveryoneWentToSchoolTogether: In "The Roamin' Nose", At one point, Joe's Mom, David's parents and Wanda reminisce about their high school years. They mention that Damont's Dad went to high school with them too.
* JerkassGods: In the "The Aeneid", Aeneid" segments, Juno makes life miserable for the Trojans because she can. (Apparently left out is the fact that she hated all Trojans because of Paris's preferring Venus over Juno and Minerva, but especially hated this particular group of Trojans because their descendants were destined to destroy her favorite city of Carthage, which was still being built at the time the story took place.)
* SparedByTheAdaptation: Dido in ''The Aeneid'' the "The Aeneid" segments doesn't commit suicide, as far as we know. This is because Aeneas is nicer here than in the original source, honestly telling her that the gods have ordered him to leave. He says that he would stay if he could and that Dido will always be in his heart. Their farewell is thus more civil if a GutPunch for the viewers.



* DarkerAndEdgier: Believe it or not, the series sendoff ''Dogs Days of the Wild West'' reveals some pretty seedy parts of Oakdale's past, namely how Wanda Gilmore inherited parts of Oakdale through back alley deals and horsetrading. And also features a decent shootout, despite the dog not being able to hold a gun.
* LastEpisodeNewCharacter: Hank Dutton, who makes his first (and only on-screen) appearance in the GrandFinale movie, ''Wishbone's Dog Days of the West''. He'd later appear in some of the ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' novels.
* TheMovie: ''Wishbone's Dog Days of the West'', the GrandFinale to the series when PBS didn't renew it for another season.

to:

* DarkerAndEdgier: Believe it or not, the series sendoff ''Dogs Days of the Wild West'' this film reveals some pretty seedy parts of Oakdale's past, namely how Wanda Gilmore inherited parts of Oakdale through back alley deals and horsetrading. And also features a decent shootout, despite the dog not being able to hold a gun.
* LastEpisodeNewCharacter: Hank Dutton, who makes his first (and only on-screen) appearance in the GrandFinale movie, ''Wishbone's Dog Days of the West''.this movie. He'd later appear in some of the ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' novels.
* TheMovie: ''Wishbone's Dog Days of the West'', One that serves as the GrandFinale to the series when PBS didn't renew it for another season.



* CordonBleughChef: In ''The Adventures of Wishbone'' #4: ''Robinhound Crusoe'', Wanda is this. During a pretty much town wide blackout, she makes do with what she has, resulting in sandwiches that are peanut butter/sardine (which Joe tastes but doesn't finish) and egg salad/mint jelly. No one besides Wishbone is interested, including Wanda but she tries to make the best of things.

to:

* CordonBleughChef: In ''The Adventures of Wishbone'' #4: ''Robinhound Crusoe'', Wanda is this. During -- during a pretty much town wide blackout, she makes do with what she has, resulting in sandwiches that are peanut butter/sardine (which Joe tastes but doesn't finish) and egg salad/mint jelly. No one besides Wishbone is interested, including Wanda but she tries to make the best of things.






* EasterEgg: On the cover of ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #3: ''Riddle of the Wayward Books'', there are two copies of ''Riddle of the Wayward Books'' itself. And one of ''The Adventures of Wishbone'' #2: ''Salty Dog''.
* WriteWhatYouKnow: Referenced InUniverse in ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #3: ''Riddle Of The Wayward Books''. Joe's working in a used bookstore, which has a parrot -- Mr. Faulkner, who keeps squawking the trope name -- as a resident. His words help Joe to be GenreSavvy and solve the mystery, linking the current rash of strange events (the store is seemingly being burglarized, but the "thief" is actually ''leaving'' rare books for the owner to find, sell and profit off of) with the events of the book ''The Haunted Bookshop'' (in which the same book keeps getting stolen from and returned to a store), which Joe is currently reading.

to:

* EasterEgg: On the cover of ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #3: ''Riddle of the Wayward Books'', cover, there are two copies of ''Riddle of the Wayward Books'' itself. And one of ''The Adventures of Wishbone'' #2: ''Salty Dog''.
* WriteWhatYouKnow: Referenced InUniverse in ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #3: ''Riddle Of The Wayward Books''.InUniverse. Joe's working in a used bookstore, which has a parrot -- Mr. Faulkner, who keeps squawking the trope name -- as a resident. His words help Joe to be GenreSavvy and solve the mystery, linking the current rash of strange events (the store is seemingly being burglarized, but the "thief" is actually ''leaving'' rare books for the owner to find, sell and profit off of) with the events of the book ''The Haunted Bookshop'' (in which the same book keeps getting stolen from and returned to a store), which Joe is currently reading.



* AliensStealCable: {{Invoked}} in ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #9: ''Case of the On-Line Alien'', involving a UFO sighting in Oakdale. Trying to unmask a hoaxer pretending to be an alien over IRC, David asks him what his favorite human TV show was in an attempt to catch him violating the speed of light. The hoaxer doesn't fall for it; he responds with ''Series/ILoveLucy''.

to:

* AliensStealCable: {{Invoked}} in ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #9: ''Case of the On-Line Alien'', involving -- there's been a UFO sighting in Oakdale. Trying Oakdale, and David is trying to unmask a hoaxer pretending to be an alien over IRC, David asks IRC by asking him what his favorite human TV show was in an attempt to catch him violating the speed of light. The hoaxer doesn't fall for it; he responds with ''Series/ILoveLucy''.



* SheCleansUpNicely: Sam gets this, and not for the first time, in ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #14: ''Disoriented Express'' where the core trio, Ellen, Wishbone [[RememberTheNewGuy and the son of a friend of Ellen's]] end up on a role-playing mystery train; Sam is cast as a lovely young heiress and as such, spends a good portion of the book in the appropriate garb. She's in much better humor about it than she was about the above incident, likely because it is something she volunteered for and is for acting purposes.

to:

* SheCleansUpNicely: Sam gets this, and not for the first time, in ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #14: ''Disoriented Express'' where when the core trio, Ellen, Wishbone [[RememberTheNewGuy and the son of a friend of Ellen's]] end up on a role-playing mystery train; Sam is cast as a lovely young heiress and as such, spends a good portion of the book in the appropriate garb. She's in much better humor about it than she was about the above incident, likely because it is something she volunteered for and is for acting purposes.



* AcquiredSituationalNarcissism: In ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'', [[spoiler:Crystal, the star of the show,]] reveals that she had attained this, [[spoiler:pulling the potentially dangerous pranks to "liven up rehearsals"]]. [[spoiler:Director Justin replaces her with Amanda and reports Crystal to the principal.]]
* ActuallyPrettyFunny: In ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'', the ''Grease'' cast rib Ryan for forgetting his lines on a regular basis. He accepts the teasing with a sheepish grin.
* CutenessProximity: In ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'', everyone's reaction to [[spoiler:Ryan's puppy Jinx.]] Except Wishbone, though justified in that Wishbone is a dog and [[spoiler:Jinx]] stole his squeaky toy.
* DeadlyPrank: Averted in ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader''; while the pranks that occur during the Theatre/{{Grease}} rehearsals, like David's sign getting lit up and Robin's skates getting sabotaged, are dangerous, no one gets hurt. [[spoiler:Even so, everyone calls out Crystal when she has to confess to it because while no one ''got'' hurt, only one injury would have gotten the show cancelled.]] Also [[spoiler:Crystal slipping on a scarf was the only genuine accident, since Ryan's puppy Jinx stole the scarf and left it on the stage.]] They do mention that Robin's skates could have gotten her badly hurt and that the only reason she didn't get injured is that Wishbone, [[EvilDetectingDog sensing something was up]], barked loudly, causing her to lose her balance harmlessly on the stage instead of shooting off it because she couldn't turn.

to:

* AcquiredSituationalNarcissism: In ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'', [[spoiler:Crystal, the star of the show,]] reveals that she had attained this, [[spoiler:pulling the potentially dangerous pranks to "liven up rehearsals"]]. [[spoiler:Director Justin replaces her with Amanda and reports Crystal to the principal.]]
* ActuallyPrettyFunny: In ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'', the The ''Grease'' cast rib ribs Ryan for forgetting his lines on a regular basis. He accepts the teasing with a sheepish grin.
* CutenessProximity: In ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'', This is everyone's reaction to [[spoiler:Ryan's puppy Jinx.]] Except Jinx]], whom they think is adorable. The only exception is Wishbone, though justified in that Wishbone is a dog and [[spoiler:Jinx]] stole his squeaky toy.
* DeadlyPrank: Averted in ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader''; Narrowly averted -- while the pranks that occur during the Theatre/{{Grease}} rehearsals, like ''Theatre/{{Grease}}'' rehearsals (like David's sign getting lit up and Robin's skates getting sabotaged, sabotaged) are dangerous, no one gets hurt. [[spoiler:Even so, everyone calls out Crystal when she has to confess to it because while no one ''got'' hurt, only one injury would have gotten the show cancelled.]] Also [[spoiler:Crystal slipping on a scarf was the only genuine accident, since Ryan's puppy Jinx stole the scarf and left it on the stage.]] They do mention that Robin's skates could have gotten her badly hurt and that the only reason she didn't get injured is that Wishbone, [[EvilDetectingDog sensing something was up]], barked loudly, causing her to lose her balance harmlessly on the stage instead of shooting off it because she couldn't turn.



** Sam, David and Joe discuss who could be sabotaging the play in ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader''. They rule out Amanda for this reason and MoralPragmatist: Amanda has all the incentive to want the show to go on, and she's not a person who would hurt others for personal gain. The same goes for Ryan, who is too much of a goofball to have malicious intent. Indeed, when [[spoiler:Sam forces Crystal to confess]], the whole cast is livid. Amanda rightly points out that [[spoiler:Crystal could have gotten Ryan and her hurt if they had danced on the bleachers]].
** Justin is a PrimaDonnaDirector in ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader''. Even so, he's more worried about Crystal and Robin when they fall rather than about the fact that both rehearsals went wrong. [[spoiler:What's more, he says he's reporting Crystal to the principal because she could have gotten someone badly hurt]].
* EvilDetectingDog: In ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'', he hears Robin's skate squeaking while she's rehearsing and starts barking in alarm. It turns out her skates were sabotaged so she was out of control. The barking causes Robin to fall onstage, but she says that if he hadn't, she would have rolled offstage and broken something the way Crystal sprained her ankle. Sam also finds the Allen Key that sabotaged the skate, thanks to Wishbone. [[spoiler:He also barks on locating the bleacher that Crystal has sabotaged, just in time for Sam, David and Joe to find it.]]
* HoistByTheirOwnPetard: [[spoiler:Crystal's final prank]] during ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'' [[spoiler:involves her taking nails out of the bleachers where her understudy Amanda and Ryan are supposed to dance, which would cause Amanda and Ryan to fall. Wishbone discovers it as Sam discusses her theory that Crystal is the prankster. Sam to trap Crystal relates her suspicions to the play's director, Justin, who agrees that for that dress rehearsal to have Crystal do the dance with Ryan with the cover of seeing if her ankle's healed. Crystal has to admit that she took the nails out when she refuses to dance on the bleachers.]]
* ItsAllAboutMe: In ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'', when Sam [[spoiler:exposes Crystal]] as the play saboteur, everyone in the cast is livid. As Amanda points out, [[spoiler:she and Ryan would have fallen with the nails taken out of the bleacher]] and the play would have been canceled. [[spoiler:Crystal]] admits to not considering that since [[spoiler:the pranks were just to "liven up the rehearsals" due to her getting bored]]. This is despite the fact that cutting the wires on David's car display was dangerous, with how it was shedding sparks everywhere. Robin also nearly rolled offstage and could have broken a bone, if not for Wishbone's barking causing her to fall on-stage harmlessly; she thanked Wishboe for that reason. Sam even bluntly says that [[spoiler:Crystal cared more about her own amusement than the play, even though she was the star]].
* ItAmusedMe: In ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'', [[spoiler:Crystal]] sheepishly admits that this is why [[spoiler:she started playing pranks for "livening up the rehearsals" since she was getting bored.]]
* JerkassHasAPoint: In ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'', Sam says that [[spoiler:she agrees with [[PrimaDonnaDirector Justin]] to take Crystal out of the performance, since Crystal with her pranks showed that she put her entertainment ahead of the play, while Crystal's understudy Amanda showed that for her showing off she put the play ahead of herself.]]
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: In ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'', Justin ultimately proves to be this despite being a PrimaDonnaDirector. He's more worried about Crystal and Robin when they fall in two different rehearsals rather than that the stagings went wrong despite his obvious frustration that they seem to have a saboteur and that nothing is going right. What's more, when he finds out from Sam that [[spoiler:Crystal is the potential saboteur, he agrees to stage a trap to test her theory without any hesitation. When Crystal is forced to confess, Justin is legitimately angry about her endangering the cast and her friends, saying that her apologies aren't enough. He's reporting her to the principal and replacing her with Amanda, effective as of their latest dress rehearsal]].
* LovableAlphaBitch: Discussed in ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'', when the trio discusses if Amanda could be the perpetrator behind the stage pranks and Sam points out that it doesn't benefit Amanda to sabotage the play since she's the understudy, thus having all the incentive for the show to go forward and that [[spoiler:for all her showing off Amanda actually prioritized the play over her ego. She had a reason to get angry on hearing Crystal sabotaged hers and Ryan's bleachers for dancing, which could have gotten her injured]].
* PrimaDonnaDirector: In ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'', Justin is this. Sam briefly wonders if he would sabotage the play for it not being perfect enough.
* SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome: In ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'', after Sam reveals that [[spoiler:Crystal was behind most of the pranks and forces her to confess, Crystal apologizes and expects that she can still be Sandy in ''Grease''. The director Justin tells Crystal that's not happening; he has her understudy Amanda take over the part permanently and is reporting her to the principal. As Sam puts it, Crystal endangered the cast with her pranks and showed she cared more about her entertainment than the show. She ends up having to serve detention for a week and to clean up the auditorium after the play's opening night.]]

to:

** Sam, David and Joe discuss who could be sabotaging the play in ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader''.play. They rule out Amanda for this reason and MoralPragmatist: Amanda has all the incentive to want the show to go on, and she's not a person who would hurt others for personal gain. The same goes for Ryan, who is too much of a goofball to have malicious intent. Indeed, when [[spoiler:Sam forces Crystal to confess]], the whole cast is livid. Amanda rightly points out that [[spoiler:Crystal could have gotten Ryan and her hurt if they had danced on the bleachers]].
** Justin is a PrimaDonnaDirector in ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader''.PrimaDonnaDirector. Even so, he's more worried about Crystal and Robin when they fall rather than about the fact that both rehearsals went wrong. [[spoiler:What's more, he says he's reporting Crystal to the principal because she could have gotten someone badly hurt]].
* EvilDetectingDog: In ''The When Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'', he hears Robin's skate squeaking while she's rehearsing and rehearsing, he starts barking in alarm. It turns out her skates were sabotaged so she was out of control. The barking causes Robin to fall onstage, but she says that if he hadn't, she would have rolled offstage and broken something the way Crystal sprained her ankle. Sam also finds the Allen Key that sabotaged the skate, thanks to Wishbone. [[spoiler:He also barks on locating the bleacher that Crystal has sabotaged, just in time for Sam, David and Joe to find it.]]
* HoistByTheirOwnPetard: [[spoiler:Crystal's final prank]] during ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'' [[spoiler:involves prank involves her taking nails out of the bleachers where her understudy Amanda and Ryan are supposed to dance, which would cause Amanda and Ryan to fall. Wishbone discovers it as Sam discusses her theory that Crystal is the prankster. Sam to trap Crystal relates her suspicions to the play's director, Justin, who agrees that for that dress rehearsal to have Crystal do the dance with Ryan with the cover of seeing if her ankle's healed. Crystal has to admit that she took the nails out when she refuses to dance on the bleachers.]]
* ItsAllAboutMe: In ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'', when When Sam [[spoiler:exposes Crystal]] as the play saboteur, everyone in the cast is livid. As Amanda points out, [[spoiler:she and Ryan would have fallen with the nails taken out of the bleacher]] and the play would have been canceled. [[spoiler:Crystal]] admits to not considering that since [[spoiler:the pranks were just to "liven up the rehearsals" due to her getting bored]]. This is despite the fact that cutting the wires on David's car display was dangerous, with how it was shedding sparks everywhere. Robin also nearly rolled offstage and could have broken a bone, if not for Wishbone's barking causing her to fall on-stage harmlessly; she thanked Wishboe for that reason. Sam even bluntly says that [[spoiler:Crystal cared more about her own amusement than the play, even though she was the star]].
* ItAmusedMe: In ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'', [[spoiler:Crystal]] sheepishly admits that this is why [[spoiler:she started playing pranks for "livening up the rehearsals" since she was getting bored.]]
* JerkassHasAPoint: In ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'', Sam says that [[spoiler:she agrees with [[PrimaDonnaDirector Justin]] to take Crystal out of the performance, since Crystal with her pranks showed that she put her entertainment ahead of the play, while Crystal's understudy Amanda showed that for her showing off she put the play ahead of herself.]]
* JerkWithAHeartOfGold: In ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'', Justin ultimately proves to be this despite being a PrimaDonnaDirector. He's more worried about Crystal and Robin when they fall in two different rehearsals rather than that the stagings went wrong despite his obvious frustration that they seem to have a saboteur and that nothing is going right. What's more, when he finds out from Sam that [[spoiler:Crystal is the potential saboteur, he agrees to stage a trap to test her theory without any hesitation. When Crystal is forced to confess, Justin is legitimately angry about her endangering the cast and her friends, saying that her apologies aren't enough. He's reporting her to the principal and replacing her with Amanda, effective as of their latest dress rehearsal]].
* LovableAlphaBitch: Discussed in ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'', when the trio discusses debates if Amanda could be the perpetrator behind the stage pranks and pranks. Sam points out that it doesn't benefit Amanda to sabotage the play since she's the understudy, thus having all the incentive for the show to go forward and that [[spoiler:for all her showing off Amanda actually prioritized the play over her ego. She had a reason to get angry on hearing Crystal sabotaged hers and Ryan's bleachers for dancing, which could have gotten her injured]].
* PrimaDonnaDirector: In ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'', Justin is this. Sam briefly wonders if he would sabotage the play for it not being perfect enough.
* SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome: In ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' #15: ''Stage Invader'', after After Sam reveals that [[spoiler:Crystal was behind most of the pranks and forces her to confess, Crystal apologizes and expects that she can still be Sandy in ''Grease''. The director Justin tells Crystal that's not happening; he has her understudy Amanda take over the part permanently and is reporting her to the principal. As Sam puts it, Crystal endangered the cast with her pranks and showed she cared more about her entertainment than the show. She ends up having to serve detention for a week and to clean up the auditorium after the play's opening night.]]



* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: In ''The Wishbone Super Mysteries'' #2: ''The Ghost of Camp Ka Nowato'', the culprit responsible for the pranks is horrified when he realizes Sam was in the tower he knocked over (he confesses that he'd thought it was empty), and promptly comes back to save her life.
* ScoobyDooHoax: ''The Wishbone Super Mysteries'' #2: ''The Ghost of Camp Ka Nowato'' revolves around one. [[spoiler: The "ghost" is a man who left civilization and lived on a corner of the property a few owners ago, but when he found out the first owner -- who knew he was there, and created the legend of Ka Nowato to help cover it up -- had died, he started pulling harmless pranks to dissuade the new owner from expanding the camp into the land where he was living. After he's exposed, he apologizes for his actions (including nearly drowning Samantha, since he didn't realize she was in the tower he'd knocked over), volunteers his personal funds to renovate the camp so its third owner won't have to sell it, and becomes an official staff member.]]

to:

* MyGodWhatHaveIDone: In ''The Wishbone Super Mysteries'' #2: ''The Ghost of Camp Ka Nowato'', the The culprit responsible for the pranks is horrified when he realizes Sam was in the tower he knocked over (he confesses that he'd thought it was empty), and promptly comes back to save her life.
* ScoobyDooHoax: ''The Wishbone Super Mysteries'' #2: ''The Ghost of Camp Ka Nowato'' The plot revolves around one. [[spoiler: The "ghost" is a man who left civilization and lived on a corner of the property a few owners ago, but when he found out the first owner -- who knew he was there, and created the legend of Ka Nowato to help cover it up -- had died, he started pulling harmless pranks to dissuade the new owner from expanding the camp into the land where he was living. After he's exposed, he apologizes for his actions (including nearly drowning Samantha, since he didn't realize she was in the tower he'd knocked over), volunteers his personal funds to renovate the camp so its third owner won't have to sell it, and becomes an official staff member.]]

Changed: 95

Removed: 1525

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


[[folder:#36: "The Entrepawneur" (the story of King Midas from ''The Metamorphoses'' by Ovid)]]

%%One tie-in book was released -- ''Wishbone Adventures'' #1: ''Curse of Gold'', a straight adaptation of the episode.

* AcquiredSituationalNarcissism: In "The Entrepawneur", Joe when running a grocery-delivery business and using Sam and David as his (unpaid) employees because he believes in TheChainsOfCommanding rather than working as a team. Eventually they leave when Sam gets injured racing with David and Joe yells at her for the waste of groceries that she spills on the pavement. His mother lampshades it when Joe tries to look up "friendship" in business handbooks.
* AdaptationalHeroism: King Midas begs the gods to take away his [[BlessedWithSuck golden touch]] ''long'' before he accidentally turns his wife and daughter [[KickTheMoralityPet into gold]].
* AdaptationSpeciesChange: In "King Midas", Silenus is changed from being a satyr to being a human.
* AdaptationTitleChange: While the episode is titled "The Entrepawneur", the novelization (from the ''Wishbone Adventures'' book series) is instead titled "Curse of Gold".
* KickTheMoralityPet: In "The Entrepawneur", Wishbone as King Midas does this to his wife and daughter when he accidentally turns them into gold. He immediately goes into MyGodWhatHaveIDone mode.
* WhatTheHellHero: In "The Entrepawneur", Sam and David call out Joe for only caring about money when she gets injured working for Joe. Granted, it was partly Sam's fault for racing with a bike-cart full of groceries, but Joe had NoSympathy for her falling down and scraping her knee.

[[/folder]]

to:

[[folder:#36: "The Entrepawneur" (the story of King Midas from ''The Metamorphoses'' by Ovid)]]

%%One tie-in book was released -- ''Wishbone Adventures'' #1: ''Curse of Gold'', a straight adaptation of the episode.

* AcquiredSituationalNarcissism: In "The Entrepawneur", Joe when running a grocery-delivery business and using Sam and David as his (unpaid) employees because he believes in TheChainsOfCommanding rather than working as a team. Eventually they leave when Sam gets injured racing with David and Joe yells at her for the waste of groceries that she spills on the pavement. His mother lampshades it when Joe tries to look up "friendship" in business handbooks.
* AdaptationalHeroism: King Midas begs the gods to take away his [[BlessedWithSuck golden touch]] ''long'' before he accidentally turns his wife and daughter [[KickTheMoralityPet into gold]].
* AdaptationSpeciesChange: In "King Midas", Silenus is changed from being a satyr to being a human.
* AdaptationTitleChange: While the episode is titled "The Entrepawneur", the novelization (from the ''Wishbone Adventures'' book series) is instead titled "Curse of Gold".
* KickTheMoralityPet: In "The Entrepawneur", Wishbone as King Midas does this to his wife and daughter when he accidentally turns them into gold. He immediately goes into MyGodWhatHaveIDone mode.
* WhatTheHellHero: In "The Entrepawneur", Sam and David call out Joe for only caring about money when she gets injured working for Joe. Granted, it was partly Sam's fault for racing with a bike-cart full of groceries, but Joe had NoSympathy for her falling down and scraping her knee.

[[/folder]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
moved to separate article


[[folder:#11: "The Impawssible Dream" (''Don Quixote'' by Miguel De Cervantes)]]

%%One tie-in book was released -- ''Wishbone Classics'' #1: ''Don Quixote'', featuring a less compressed adaptation of the original story with comments by Wishbone rather than the modern-day segments.

* ElSpanishO: In the tie-in book "Wishbone Classics'' #1: ''Don Quixote'', one of Wishbone's interjections is to explain the meaning of the name "Don Quixote", and remarks to himself "Hmm... Don Wishbono. Not bad." In the epilogue, he refers to himself as "Don Wishbono" again.

[[/folder]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
moved to separate articles


[[folder:#17: "Frankenbone" (''Frankenstein'' by Mary Shelley)]]

%%One tie-in book was released -- ''Wishbone Classics'' #7: ''Frankenstein'', featuring a less compressed adaptation of the original story with comments by Wishbone rather than the modern-day segments.

* {{Bowdlerize}}: Their version of ''Literature/{{Frankenstein}}'' ends with Dr. Frankenstein ill in bed and the monster promising to go away and never hurt anyone. What they leave out is the part following this in which Frankenstein does indeed die as well as the fact that the monster was planning to kill himself when he went away.
* LostInImitation: Mostly averted, including in "Frankenbone", which follows the novel in portraying Frankenstein as a naive young student rather than a MadScientist and the [[FrankensteinsMonster monster]] does not have green skin, bolts in his neck, etc. Played straight, however, in that Wishbone as Frankenstein still brings the creature to life by running electricity into a corpse.
* RunningGag: Joe tries to make a skeleton of a T-Rex, and it keeps collapsing.
* TravelMontage: In "Frankenbone", the Monster's rampage through Europe and into the Arctic includes shots of the camera panning across a map of eighteenth-century Europe.

[[/folder]]



[[folder:#37: "Pantin' at the Opera" (''The Phantom of the Opera'' by Gaston Leroux)]]

* AdaptationalNiceGuy: Carlotta in ''Phantom of the Opera'' shows none of her spoiled diva attitude. She merely happens to have irked the Phantom. Tellingly, Christine saves her from being crushed when the Phantom cuts a sandbag to fall on Carlotta.
* CompressedAdaptation: [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KgN6w1ckjaI&feature=related This]] review of the ''Literature/ThePhantomOfTheOpera'' episode, by The WebVideo/PhantomReviewer, is mostly negative, but the reviewer can't help but be amazed that it's probably more faithful to the original novel than ''any'' other screen version of the story.
* DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything: Christine and the Phantom's relationship is played out with him as a terrible boyfriend practicing DomesticAbuse; she warns Raoul that the Phantom has a bad temper and not to anger him. Later on, when she and Raoul plan to elope, the Phantom kidnaps her and threatens to kill Raoul as Christine is begging for her love to run.
* HeroicBystander: Christine saves Carlotta from a falling sandbag when the Phantom targets her. She says later that she knows Eric too well.

[[/folder]]



[[folder:#41 & 42: "Halloween Hound: The Legend of Creepy Collars, Parts 1 & 2" (''The Legend of Sleepy Hollow'' by Washington Irving)]]

%%One tie-in book was released -- ''The Super Adventures of Wishbone'' #2: ''The Legend of Sleepy Hollow'', a straight adaptation of the episodes.

* AdaptationalHeroism: Ichabod Crane does not appear to have any interest in inheriting Katrina's fortune through marriage. He does court her, but that's about it.
* AdaptationTitleChange: While the episode is titled "Halloween Hound: The Legend of Creepy Collars, Parts 1 & 2", the novelization (from the ''The Super Adventures of Wishbone'' book series) is instead simply titled "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow", sharing its title with the book the episode was based on.
* TheBadGuyWins: In the show's telling of "Sleepy Hollow", it's implied that [[spoiler: Brom successfully chased away Ichabod Crane by posing as the Headless Horseman so as to court Katrina without interference]].
* DarkerAndEdgier: The show's retelling of "Sleepy Hollow", in contrast to the main story being a fun Halloween scavenger hunt, frames it as a ghost encounter. Due to making Ichabod Crane an AdaptationalNiceGuy and not conveying the original text's satirical notes, we feel more sympathy for him as he studies spirits and courts Katrina. [[spoiler:Rather than the text reassuring us that Ichabod probably fled for safer parts from the Horseman, the townsfolk find Ichabod's bell at the bridge, and a smirking Brom Bones looking onward from his black horse]].
* DickDastardlyStopsToCheat: In "Halloween Hound: The Legend of Creepy Collars", Damont is the first to reach the last challenge in the Halloween scavenger hunt. But instead of just, you know, claiming the prize, he decides to linger around at the end so that he can sabotage Joe, Sam, and David when they get there.
* HeadlessHorseman: "Halloween Hound: The Legend of Creepy Collars" (later renamed simply as "Wishbone in: The Legend of Sleepy Hollow")
* HiddenDepths: Damont is actually quite clever when he thinks to use his brains. While he follows the gang to solve the first puzzle of the Halloween scavenger hunt, he figures out the other two with only his cousin Jimmy for help. If he hadn't stopped to lock David in a room in the final location -- a haunted house -- he might have won the gift certificate.
* LeaningOnTheFourthWall: In the Halloween episode, Sam asks where Wishbone's costume is. "A dog, wear a silly costume? I think not."

[[/folder]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
moved to separate article


[[folder:#28: "Salty Dog" (''Treasure Island'' by Robert Louis Stevenson)]]

%%One tie-in book was released -- ''The Adventures of Wishbone'' #2: ''Salty Dog'', a straight adaptation of the episode.

* HollywoodFire: Downplayed; Joe and David start coughing after a fire starts in the barn where they are trapped with Sam. They shout for Sam to hurry because it's getting hard to see and breathe with the smoke. Nevertheless, they manage to work together to get Sam safely outside where she can unlock the door and free them. They cough outside just as the adults come with the fire department, and presumably the boys get treatment for smoke inhalation. By the end of the episode a few days later, they're fine.
* ItsAllMyFault: Sam's thoughts on getting herself, Joe and David trapped in a condemned barn. She makes up for it by getting them all out during a fire with minimal injury (apparently only smoke inhalation since they're all fine in the next scene which is implied to be the next day).
* NiceJobBreakingItHero: Interestingly, "Salty Dog" both plays it straight and averts it. Basically Sam insists on going into a condemned barn to look for a special horseshoe and the trio gets trapped inside. That would be the playing it straight. Later the barn catches on fire and Sam manages to get herself and the boys out with minimal injuries. She then proceeds to apologize to which the boys respond by pointing out that she saved their lives.
* OutdoorsyGal: In "Salty Dog", Sam once persuades the boys to help her look for "Blackbeard's Horseshoe" inside a condemned barn.
* SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome:
** In "Salty Dog", the main trio becomes trapped in a condemned barn. Partway through, David and Joe charge the door with the intent to break it down...and bounce off with groans that are equal parts pain and frustration while the door remains un-budged.
** Likewise, Sam wanted to go inside the barn to find the horseshoe. Wanda and Ellen tell her no one is allowed inside because it's condemned. Part of the reason the barn is getting demolished is for safety purposes. Sure enough, Sam convinces David and Joe they could at least look at little...and the door slams shut due to it being old and rickety, trapping them inside. They also nearly burn alive when a fire starts in the hay. Sam's dad also tells her later he was scared when she and the others went missing and what she did was dangerous.
* TimmyInAWell: During "Salty Dog", the kids and Wishbone get trapped in a barn. Wishbone finds a hole in the barn and digs through the straw to make an opening big enough for him. The kids realize this means he can get help, since Wishbone is super smart, and Sam tucks the flyer for the barn into his collar. Sure enough, Wishbone makes it back to the Talbot household and gives the flyer to the adults. Wanda realizes what it means and they all hustle to the barn just as random sparks set it alight. Sam by then had already rescued herself, David and Joe, but they're able to get the fire department to contain the subsequent blaze.
* WhatTheHellHero: In "Salty Dog", where the trio gets trapped in a condemned barn that catches fire, Sam gives herself one of these speeches because [[NiceJobBreakingItHero it was her fault for getting them in there in the first place.]] Joe and David's opinions on the other hand...
-->'''Joe:''' ''(incredulous)'' Sorry? Sam, you rescued us!\\
'''David:''' Yeah, you saved our lives in there!

[[/folder]]

Added: 283

Changed: 187

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* OpenSesame: As usual, this is the password to get into and out of the cave of the Forty Thieves. And as usual, Ali Baba's brother forgets it while inside, trying "Open Barley", before muttering to himself that he knows it's ''some'' type of grain and trying again with "Open Oats".




to:

* SparedByTheAdaptation: In this version, rather than being killed by the Forty Thieves, Ali Baba's brother is rescued when Ali Baba himself arrives at the cave just ahead of the Thieves.



Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

%%One tie-in book was released -- ''Wishbone Adventures'' #1: ''Curse of Gold'', a straight adaptation of the episode.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

%%One tie-in book was released -- ''Wishbone Classics'' #1: ''Don Quixote'', featuring a less compressed adaptation of the original story with comments by Wishbone rather than the modern-day segments.


Added DiffLines:

%%Two tie-in books were released -- ''Wishbone Classics'' #12: ''Ivanhoe'', featuring a less compressed adaptation of the original story with comments by Wishbone rather than the modern-day segments; and ''The Adventures of Wishbone'' #20: ''Ivanhound'', a straight adaptation of the episode.


Added DiffLines:

%%One tie-in book was released -- ''The Adventures of Wishbone'' #9: ''A Tail of Two Sitters'', a straight adaptation of the episode.


Added DiffLines:

%%One tie-in book was released -- ''Wishbone Classics'' #7: ''Frankenstein'', featuring a less compressed adaptation of the original story with comments by Wishbone rather than the modern-day segments.


Added DiffLines:

%%Two tie-in books were released -- ''Wishbone Classics'' #9: ''A Journey to the Center of the Earth'', featuring a less compressed adaptation of the original story with comments by Wishbone rather than the modern-day segments; and ''The Adventures of Wishbone'' #17: ''Digging to the Center of the Earth'', a straight adaptation of the episode.


Added DiffLines:

%%One tie-in book was released -- ''The Adventures of Wishbone'' #11: ''The Pawloined Paper'', a straight adaptation of the episode.


Added DiffLines:

%%One tie-in book was released -- ''The Adventures of Wishbone'' #3: ''The Prince and the Pooch'', a straight adaptation of the episode.


Added DiffLines:

%%One tie-in book was released -- ''The Adventures of Wishbone'' #2: ''Salty Dog'', a straight adaptation of the episode.


Added DiffLines:

%%One tie-in book was released -- ''Wishbone Classics'' #10: ''The Red Badge of Courage'', featuring a less compressed adaptation of the original story with comments by Wishbone rather than the modern-day segments.


Added DiffLines:

%%One tie-in book was released -- ''The Adventures of Wishbone'' #8: ''Muttketeer!'', a straight adaptation of the episode.


Added DiffLines:

%%One tie-in book was released -- ''The Super Adventures of Wishbone'' #2: ''The Legend of Sleepy Hollow'', a straight adaptation of the episodes.


Added DiffLines:

%%One tie-in book was released -- ''The Super Adventures of Wishbone'' #1: ''Wishbone's Dog Days of the West'', a straight adaptation of the film.

Added: 11

Changed: 418

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


%%[[folder:#19: "One Thousand and One Tails" (''Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves'' from the Arabian Nights)]]
%%[[/folder]]
%%

to:

%%[[folder:#19: [[folder:#19: "One Thousand and One Tails" (''Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves'' from the Arabian Nights)]]
%%[[/folder]]
%%
Nights)]]

* SequelHook: InUniverse, when Scheherazade finishes the story of Ali Baba, she and her sister mention she knows many more tales, naming a few (such as ''Aladdin'', ''The Enchanted Horse'' and ''Sinbad'')... and the Sultan, who's intrigued and wants to hear them, can't think of a way to fit her execution onto the schedule. Ultimately, he just cancels it and asks her to start telling her next story.

[[/folder]]

Added: 11

Changed: 418

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


%%[[folder:#26: "The Prince and the Pooch" (''The Prince and the Pauper'' by Mark Twain)]]
%%[[/folder]]
%%

to:

%%[[folder:#26: [[folder:#26: "The Prince and the Pooch" (''The Prince and the Pauper'' by Mark Twain)]]
%%[[/folder]]
%%
Twain)]]

* SignificantDoubleCasting: In the "The Prince and the Pauper" segments, Soccer the dog plays both Tom Canty and Prince Edward Tutor, appearing twice in the same scene via split-screen technology.

[[/folder]]



* ForWantOfANail: In ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' ##13: ''Case of the Unsolved Case'', Joe and Sam become worried when David doesn't turn up for a study group and leaves no message as to why he isn't coming. After they find David [[spoiler:(he was locked in a equipment shed near town; long story)]], they ask why he didn't leave a message and he very confusedly responds that he did. The humans dismiss it as a coincidence but Wishbone realizes that earlier he had knocked over the answering machine at the Talbots' and erased the message by accident. Wishbone at first considers admitting this and apologizing but then realizes that if the message HADN'T been erased, David would have been trapped even longer than he was. [[FridgeHorror And since the story was set as fall changes into winter...]]

to:

* ForWantOfANail: In ''The Wishbone Mysteries'' ##13: ''Case of the Unsolved Case'', AccidentalHero: Joe and Sam become worried when David doesn't turn up for a study group and leaves no message as to why he isn't coming. After they find David [[spoiler:(he was locked in a equipment shed near town; long story)]], they ask why he didn't leave a message and he very confusedly responds that he did. The humans dismiss it as a coincidence but Wishbone realizes that earlier he had knocked over the answering machine at the Talbots' and erased the message by accident. accident, leading to Joe and Sam not getting it, getting worried and going out to find and, ultimately, rescue David. Wishbone at first considers admitting this and apologizing but then realizes that if the message HADN'T ''hadn't'' been erased, David would have been trapped even longer than he was. [[FridgeHorror And since the story was set as fall changes into winter...]]

Changed: 106

Removed: 1675

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
moved to separate article


[[folder:#20: "Mixed Breeds" (''The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde'' by Robert Louis Stevenson)]]

* AdaptationTitleChange: While the episode is titled "Mixed Breeds", the novelization (from the ''The Adventures of Wishbone'' book series) is instead titled "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Dog".
* ApologyGift: In "Mixed Breeds", Mr. Prewett has a JerkassRealization when he assigns a surprise examination to his class after arriving late, and that night [[spoiler:he sees Joe, Sam and David studying when accompanying Wanda to Pepper Pete's]]. The next day, as an apology to his students, he [[spoiler:says they're doing a taste test; he cancels the examination and orders everyone pizza]].
* DrivenToSuicide: In a moment amazingly not edited out for the kiddies, Jekyll poisons himself onscreen and leaves a SuicideNote for Utterson explaining that he did so to protect London from Mr. Hyde, since he was not only getting addicted to the transformations but also that the changes were becoming more frequent.
* HypocriticalHeartwarming: In "Mixed Breeds", when Wanda and Bob Prewett have cancelled a date so that Wanda can go see a mysterious Elvis impersonator and [[spoiler:Mr. Prewett can ''be'' the impersonator]], Wanda tells Ellen that she finds Bob Prewett "stuffy" and she wants to impress this King of Rock and Roll. Later on, when [[spoiler:Bob confesses that he didn't tell her he was the impersonator because he was afraid she wouldn't like the boring him, Wanda laughs and tells him she likes him JustTheWayYouAre.]]
* LovesMyAlterEgo: In "Mixed Breeds", Wanda falls for an Elvis impersonator [[spoiler:who happens to be Bob Prewett]].
* WhamShot: In "Mixed Breeds", the singer that Wanda crushes on losing his Elvis wig, revealing him to be [[spoiler:Bob Prewett]].

[[/folder]]

to:

[[folder:#20: "Mixed Breeds" (''The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde'' by Robert Louis Stevenson)]]

* AdaptationTitleChange: While the episode is titled "Mixed Breeds", the novelization (from the ''The Adventures of Wishbone'' book series) is instead titled "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Dog".
* ApologyGift: In "Mixed Breeds", Mr. Prewett has a JerkassRealization when he assigns a surprise examination to his class after arriving late, and that night [[spoiler:he sees Joe, Sam and David studying when accompanying Wanda to Pepper Pete's]]. The next day, as an apology to his students, he [[spoiler:says they're doing a taste test; he cancels the examination and orders everyone pizza]].
* DrivenToSuicide: In a moment amazingly not edited out for the kiddies, Jekyll poisons himself onscreen and leaves a SuicideNote for Utterson explaining that he did so to protect London from Mr. Hyde, since he was not only getting addicted to the transformations but also that the changes were becoming more frequent.
* HypocriticalHeartwarming: In "Mixed Breeds", when Wanda and Bob Prewett have cancelled a date so that Wanda can go see a mysterious Elvis impersonator and [[spoiler:Mr. Prewett can ''be'' the impersonator]], Wanda tells Ellen that she finds Bob Prewett "stuffy" and she wants to impress this King of Rock and Roll. Later on, when [[spoiler:Bob confesses that he didn't tell her he was the impersonator because he was afraid she wouldn't like the boring him, Wanda laughs and tells him she likes him JustTheWayYouAre.]]
* LovesMyAlterEgo: In "Mixed Breeds", Wanda falls for an Elvis impersonator [[spoiler:who happens to be Bob Prewett]].
* WhamShot: In "Mixed Breeds", the singer that Wanda crushes on losing his Elvis wig, revealing him to be [[spoiler:Bob Prewett]].

[[/folder]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
moved to separate article


[[folder:#10: "Bone of Arc" (''Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc'' by Mark Twain)]]

* BloodlessCarnage: Somewhat averted in the ''Joan of Arc'' episode when Joan takes an arrow to the shoulder. There's no blood but she is clearly in great pain.
* BothSidesHaveAPoint: In "Bone of Arc", Sam and her friends' soccer team have to meet with the head of a committee when the rival team coach contests the win because Sam was the best player on the field. The rival coach says that they broke the rules by signing up Sam one day before and not 48 hours before, though David had mistakenly assumed that she fit within the time frame. Sam and David's Dad who is the coach points out that she was helping out of her friends, and they think the coach is being sexist due to the fact that Sam is a girl playing on a boys' team. While the committee votes in favor of the Blast coach due to the technicality that Sam signed up too late, they are apologetic knowing that Sam had good intentions, and say that Sam is free to join the team next season and win. The Blast coach definitely looks the worst coming out, and Mr. Barnes said he considers it their victory nonetheless.
* BurnTheWitch: What happens to Joan of Arc, though the episode leaves out the witchcraft part. They DO say she received an [[KangarooCourt unfair trial]] after the English captured her.
* {{Demythification}}: The UsefulNotes/JoanOfArc episode pretty much drops the religious aspect entirely in favor of focusing on her desire to bring freedom to France. It does include the scene where she picks the dauphin (referred to in the episode as "the king") out of a crowd, but the episode [[MaybeMagicMaybeMundane only vaguely hints at a supernatural explanation for it]].
* LoopholeAbuse: Subverted in the "Joan of Arc" episode. Sam volunteers to play in Joe and David's soccer team since a rule says that as long as she's in the roster submitted a few days earlier she can play. Because she is a girl, and the one who ends up deciding the game, however, the opposing team contests their win and gets it reversed.
* SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome: In "Bone of Arc", Joe's soccer team need a replacement player and Sam is convinced to sub in at the last minute during the championship and manages to score the winning point. However because she wasn't properly registered within a certain time frame (48 hours), the opposing team's coach contest it. Unfortunately, the soccer committee rule in the opposing team's favor and the win is voided.
* TraumaticHaircut: A variant; Joan of Arc starts her episode with long hair, and she seems to carry it with her into battle, under her helmet. When the English capture her and sentence her to death, however, her hair is noticeably shorter. The episode isn't clear as to whether or not the English themselves did the haircut, but the implications are there.

[[/folder]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
moved to separate article


[[folder:#7: "Cyranose" (''Cyrano de Bergerac'' by Edmond Rostand)]]

* AdaptationalHeroism: Cyrano de Bergerac is still a DeadpanSnarker but not an HonorBeforeReason StarvingArtist. He agrees to help Christian woo Roxanne because he wants Roxanne to be happy, and doesn't confess on his deathbed.
* {{Bowdlerize}}: The show's ending to Cyrano de Bergerac was significantly more cheerful than in the original work. When Cyrano confesses that he wrote the letters under Christian's name, he was dying in the original; here, Roxanne and Cyrano are alive and well, if much older, and Roxanne is the one who figures it out.
* PlagiarismInFiction: In "Cyranose", David brings a poem to class that he didn't write, that someone [[spoiler:aka Wanda Gilmore]] left anonymously on his porch. He confesses when Mr. Prewett wants to publish the poem, though his only punishment is to write a new poem because Mr. Prewett is a ReasonableAuthorityFigure not bound by modern school rules.
* ReasonableAuthorityFigure: Mr. Prewett in "Cyranose". When David confesses that he didn't write the poem that Mr. Prewett wants to publish, he merely says "I'm DisappointedInYou," tells him to write another poem, and allows David to recite it. He also listens to David's story that the latter found the original poem on his porch, and decides to track down the actual writer (Wanda Gilmore).
* UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom: Subverted in "Cyranose" when Wanda delivers a poem to David without signing it, which he brings to class as his homework assignment. Although David could have gotten in trouble for PlagiarismInFiction when he confesses the truth, Mr. Prewett's desire to find the real author and the different values of the 90s allow David to only have to write another poem. Mr. Prewett and Wanda subsequently start to date.
* WhatYouAreInTheDark: Much as in the source material of ''Cyrano de Bergerac'', Christian feels guilty when he realizes that Roxanne is in love with him for the letters Cyrano is writing under Christian's name. He tells Cyrano they need to tell Roxanne the truth, and he will after a battle. Of course, he dies, and Cyrano can't bring himself to break Roxanne's heart further by confessing that ''he'' wrote the letters. Roxanne, when she finds out years later, reassures Cyrano that her heart isn't broken, and wishes he had told her.
* WrongInsultOffence: "Cyranose" does a CompressedAdaptation of ''Theatre/CyranoDeBergerac'' as the book of the week (with Wishbone of course playing Cyrano). It [[https://youtu.be/ioWi5j1RxIs?t=180 opens]] with the famous "how to insult my nose" scene (paraphrased from the play).
-->'''UpperClassTwit:''' Excuse me, Dog-face, but your nose ''is'' rather large.\\
'''Cyrano:''' "My nose is rather large"? "Rather large", you say? Is that the best you can do? ''(laughs)'' I do not need my sword to teach you a lesson! I have... words! ''(drops sword out of his mouth)'' Let me teach you how to insult my nose, monsieur! You could have said, "Your nose is so big, you should call a doctor and have it amputated!" Or, how 'bout this: "What do you carry around in that snout, your pens or your whole writing desk?" Ooh, how 'bout this one: "Do you love the birds so much that you let them perch on your nose?" But no! The best you can come up with is, "Your nose is rather large." Well, any fool can see that my nose is rather large, but your brain is rather small.

[[/folder]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
moved to separate article


[[folder:#12: "Fleabitten Bargain" (''Faust'' by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe)]]

* {{Bowdlerize}}: In the ''{{Theatre/Faust}}'' episode, it is [[AdaptationExplanationExtrication not explained why Gretchen ended up dying in a dungeon]]. In the original play, Faust got her pregnant out of wedlock and she was sentenced to death for committing infanticide.
* {{Satan}}: He's depicted in the ''{{Theatre/Faust}}'' episode, and yes, they did one. He's mostly referred to as "Mephisto", but the InadvertentEntranceCue for his first appearance clearly identifies him as the Devil. Mephisto is portrayed as a man who dresses in Renaissance clothing (contemporary to Faust's time), speaks in a [[VoiceOfTheLegion modulated voice]], and [[PlayingWithFire controls fire]].

[[/folder]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* See [[Recap/Wishbone here]].

to:

* See [[Recap/Wishbone [[Recap/{{Wishbone}} here]].

Changed: 48

Removed: 1538

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
moved to separate article


* ''Recap/WishboneS1E01And02ATailInTwainParts1And2''
* ''Recap/WishboneS1E03TwistedTail''
* ''Recap/WishboneS1E04RosieOhRosieOh''
* ''Recap/WishboneS1E05HomerSweetHomer''
* ''Recap/WishboneS1E06BarkThatBark''
* ''Recap/WishboneS1E08TheSlobberyHound''
* ''Recap/WishboneS1E09DiggingUpThePast''
* ''Recap/WishboneS1E23BarkToTheFuture''
* ''Recap/WishboneS1E24PawPrintsOfThieves''
* ''Recap/WishboneS1E30ADoggedExpose''

to:

* ''Recap/WishboneS1E01And02ATailInTwainParts1And2''
* ''Recap/WishboneS1E03TwistedTail''
* ''Recap/WishboneS1E04RosieOhRosieOh''
* ''Recap/WishboneS1E05HomerSweetHomer''
* ''Recap/WishboneS1E06BarkThatBark''
* ''Recap/WishboneS1E08TheSlobberyHound''
* ''Recap/WishboneS1E09DiggingUpThePast''
* ''Recap/WishboneS1E23BarkToTheFuture''
* ''Recap/WishboneS1E24PawPrintsOfThieves''
* ''Recap/WishboneS1E30ADoggedExpose''
See [[Recap/Wishbone here]].



[[folder:#14: "The Hunchdog of Notre Dame" (''The Hunchback of Notre Dame'' by Victor Hugo)]]

* AdaptationalHeroism: [[Literature/TheHunchbackOfNotreDame Quasimodo]] is framed for kidnapping Esmeralda rather than actually doing the deed.
* AsYouKnow: In the episode based on ''Literature/TheHunchbackOfNotreDame'', Frollo's first appearance has him helpfully explaining his identity to Quasimodo. He starts with the words, "You know who I am." It's framed as him angrily berating Quasimodo for leaving the cathedral and becoming the King of Fools at a local festival.
* {{Bowdlerize}}: For ''Literature/TheHunchbackOfNotreDame'', they end with Quasimodo rescuing Esmeralda and this is portrayed as a simple happy ending. No one dies, not even Frollo. Also, the novel's religious themes are dropped entirely. In fact, there is no reference to religion whatsoever, which is pretty remarkable for a story centered on a cathedral.
* CompressedAdaptation: ''Literature/TheHunchbackOfNotreDame'' is simplified to the point where Quasimodo, Esmeralda, and Frollo are the only named characters. There's a passing reference to "Esmeralda's boyfriend", but he's neither shown nor named.

[[/folder]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Catchphrase is an index


* CatchPhrase: Wishbone's are "Hellooo!" and "Whoocha!"

to:

* CatchPhrase: CharacterCatchphrase: Wishbone's are "Hellooo!" and "Whoocha!"

Added: 41

Removed: 41

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ''Recap/WishboneS1E08TheSlobberyHound''



* ''Recap/WishboneS1E08TheSlobberyHound''

Added: 79

Removed: 4580

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* ''Recap/WishboneS1E08TheSlobberyHound''
* ''Recap/WishboneS1E30ADoggedExpose''



[[folder:#8: "The Slobbery Hound" (''The Hound of the Baskervilles'' by Arthur Conan Doyle)]]

* AdaptationalDumbass:
** Henry in the ''Hound of the Baskervilles'' book had the sense to not walk around the moor at night, since that was how Charles Baskerville died. He only does so when Sherlock asks him to, saying they have a plan to deal with the hound, and even then escapes by the skin of his teeth. Here, Watson reveals that Stapleton invited Henry for a late supper, making Holmes realize that Henry would have to cross the moor. Henry apparently didn't see any danger, even though Beryl was mysterious absent.
** Stapleton also gets this. He had the sense in the books to be plausibly away from [[spoiler:the murders so as to have an alibi. His attempt to flee when he is busted gets him killed in the moors because no one knows where he went]]. Here, he [[spoiler:reveals himself with a PsychoticSmirk and shows that the Hound is by his side before letting it give chase to Henry. Watson and Holmes had already figured out that Stapleton was the Hound's master and a potential heir to the Baskerville fortune, but Stapleton did not help his case]].
* AdaptationalExplanationExtrication: In the ''Hound of the Baskervilles'' adaptation, it's not explained why Stapleton [[spoiler:tied up and gagged Beryl in their rental, leaving her struggling and banging her bound feet against the floor for help. That's because she wasn't his sister but his ''wife'' and he was using her as a HoneyTrap on Henry. Beryl did fall for Henry for real and refused to take part in being an accessory to his murder when Stapleton killed another man, mistaking him for Henry]].
* ClearMyName: Wishbone is blamed for the damages caused by a stray bloodhound and is determined to catch him.
* EvilDetectingDog: Wishbone can always sense when something isn't right; this is exemplified in "The Slobbery Hound", where part of the reason he gets in trouble when a stray bloodhound terrorizes the neighborhood is that he's chasing the dog and is right behind it.
* FamilyFriendlyFirearms: Downplayed, in that Watson draws his revolver out of his jacket pocket at Holmes' instruction, but it's a gray area whether we actually see him firing it: the next shot in an extremely foggy one, to the point where we can't see actors or anyone on-screen, but we do hear gunshots and see the small spurts of flame you might expect from a revolver fired at night. Next shot, we can see the actors again, and Holmes is asking Watson if he's hurt.
* PoliceAreUseless: The dog catcher writes up a citation for the damage Wishbone is accused of, even though a cursory glance at the paw prints and bite marks point to a dog much bigger than him.
* SparedByTheAdaptation: In the original ''Hound of the Baskervilles'' novel, [[spoiler:Stapleton fled through the moors when Watson and Holmes busted him, shooting his hound. We find out that Holmes successfully caught him and put him in jail in the Wishbone adaptation]].
* ThisBearWasFramed: An "animal framed for the actions of another animal" variant -- the titular Jack Russell is blamed for a variety of incidents that were clearly caused by a dog given the paw prints and teeth marks found at the scenes, not to mention the garbage cans being knocked over. When the main trio investigates though, they discover that Wishbone couldn't have caused the problems because A) the paw prints and teeth marks were way too big to have come from Wishbone and B) he's too short to knock over the trashcans, not to mention that when they're full, they're too heavy for him to push. Ultimately they find the dog (a giant bloodhound, as befits a WholePlotReference to ''Literature/TheHoundOfTheBaskervilles'') responsible and use the evidence they collected to clear Wishbone.

[[/folder]]



[[folder:#30: "A Dogged Exposé" (''A Scandal in Bohemia'' by Arthur Conan Doyle)]]

* LeaningOnTheFourthWall: In "A Doggoned Expose", when Amanda gives the WhamLine mentioned below, Wishbone remarks "How's that for a Plot Twist?"
* WhamLine: In "A Doggoned Expose", when the trio confronts Amanda about the [[spoiler: smear campaign against Sam]], her response is one of these: [[spoiler: (while handing Sam a smear flyer against her: "Why would I do this to myself?")]]
* WhatYouAreInTheDark: In "A Dogged Exposé", Damont is astounded when Sam takes a humiliating photo of him in revenge for him smearing her all over town with flyers; rather than "play his game", she gives him the negatives because she doesn't want to stoop to his level. Damont is startled enough to sincerely apologize.

[[/folder]]
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Three Amigos is a disambiguation


* ThreeAmigos: Joe and his two best friends.

Top