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1%% This page has been alphabetized. Please add new examples in the correct order.
2
3->''"Doing an animated film is like building a cruise ship -- you start it in one economy and finish it in another."''
4-->-- Hollywood reporter Jim Hill (paraphrased)
5
6The production period necessary for any given work varies depending on the medium. Obviously live television is instantaneous, while even live-action scripted shows can be filmed and edited within days. This puts certain other mediums, like animation and video games, at a disadvantage. Animation takes time. Good animation takes a ''long'' time. Even the simplest animated TV shows can see a production period of a year for a single episode with multiple episodes in production at the same time.
7
8While the structure of an animation pipeline can actually a boon in some cases, there is one major creative sacrifice those in animation must always make: the ability to be topical.[[note]]You don't need to film physical actors on location or a set, which adds far more flexibility in how much of a work can be produced without a large crew in the same location. The chaos of the UsefulNotes/COVID19Pandemic highlighted this, where animation was the one sector of the entertainment industry that had little issue continuing on as normal after a short adjustment period, since everyone could just work at home. However, series produced before the pandemic continued to release months after it started, and weren't adjusted to match -- the "Catch-Up Song" in ''WesternAnimation/Animaniacs2020'', for example, attempts to predict the future but doesn't mention COVID-19 at all.[[/note]] Video games are a more insular medium as a whole, but their production pipeline is similar, both in set-up and length, so this issue can apply to them as well.
9
10That isn't to say a work that spent five years in development can't give an accurate picture of the social or political climate it is eventually released in, but due to the long lead time, it's much harder to be certain that whatever you're commentating on will still be relevant over a year later. The more specific the subject you want to reference, the more likely you'll find your audience baffled about why you're still talking about it when everyone else has moved on months ago, assuming they even ''remember'' it. Conversely, this means last minute changes are generally not feasible when you take into account the writing, producer approval, performer availability and bringing all those elements together and woven naturally into the story.
11
12Can result in UnintentionalPeriodPiece if it ends up ''way'' behind on current events the time it is released. If lucky, some themes may become [[ValuesResonance more topical]] due to [[LifeImitatesArt coincidental events mirroring it]].
13
14Compare TheShelfOfMovieLanguishment and ExtremelyLengthyCreation. Contrast WritingByTheSeatOfYourPants, ChristmasRushed and AbsurdlyShortProductionTime.
15-----
16!!Examples:
17
18[[foldercontrol]]
19
20[[folder:Anime and Manga]]
21* ''Anime/PokemonTheSeriesSunAndMoon'' featured a spoof of ''Anime/HugttoPrettyCure'' in one of their episodes. However, [[Anime/StarTwinklePrettyCure the next series]] was already on its seventh episode by the time the parody was broadcast. It also had the characters transforming by using food or drinks, which ''Anime/KiraKiraPrecureALaMode'', an incarnation that ended two years prior, used.
22[[/folder]]
23
24[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
25* This even happened to the ''Toys/{{Bionicle}}'' movies despite their amazingly fast (or rather, rushed) production time, as they had gone into production before some of the characters' looks or the outcome of the stories were even finalized. This accounts for why certain characters look more like their toy prototypes than the versions sold in stores. The ending of the first film is a particularly huge mess, as both Toys/{{LEGO}} and the filmmakers reconfigured its climax after the voices had already been recorded, leading to crucial events going unexplained, explained events not happening the way they're described, and twists and character actions being utterly nonsensical. The fourth film, ''The Legend Reborn'' presents further unfinished concepts: Bone Hunters look like Rock Tribe members rather than the finished toys, the Thornax ammo is a glowing energy orb instead of a volatile fruit (it gets its toy appearance in one of the later scenes), characters are fully robotic instead of organic people in armor with cyber-implants, and the planets Aqua Magna and Bota Magna are in a different galaxy than Bara Magna and its two moons, while in the finished story said planets ''are'' the moons -- the opening scene had so many contradictions that it was de-canonized. Also, Gresh in the movie is an inexperienced rookie despite already having matured in other stories.
26* ''WesternAnimation/TheEmojiMovie'' was hit hard by this trope, with all the apps and slang featured in the film being already outdated again when the movie finally came out, despite it having a ridiculously short production time for a major studio animated film (from concept to final product in a mere ''two years''). This was lampshaded in the ''[[WebVideo/HonestTrailers Honest Trailer]]'' of the film.
27* ''WesternAnimation/JetsonsTheMovie'' infamously replaced Creator/JanetWaldo (the original voice of Judy Jetson) with '80s pop singer Tiffany as a bit of StuntCasting intended to draw in a teenage audience. By the time the film actually opened, Tiffany has long since fallen out of style (Janet Waldo didn't take it well, as she had recorded all of her lines prior but wasn't told she was being replaced, though she eventually let it go). In fact, the film took so long to produce that two of its lead actors ''died'' a year before it was released: this was the final acting role for both Creator/MelBlanc and George O'Hanlon, the latter of whom passed away ''in the recording studio.''
28* The song "Gangnam Style" appears in the end credits of ''WesternAnimation/TheNutJob'', (complete with a CGI-animated PSY singing it) which was released in January 2014...almost 2 years after that song was hugely popular!
29* ''WesternAnimation/RalphBreaksTheInternet'' features a lengthy segment involving Baby Groot, who received a brief marketing frenzy after ''Film/GuardiansOfTheGalaxyVol2''; however, between the time this segment was written and the film was released, Disney largely moved on from the character and ''Film/AvengersInfinityWar'' had featured him as an adolescent.
30* This is one of the reasons (the other being heavy ExecutiveMeddling in the version that eventually did get released) why people think ''WesternAnimation/TheThiefAndTheCobbler'' is a ripoff of ''WesternAnimation/{{Aladdin}}''; it was released after it, but had actually been in development for so long beforehand that it's more credible to say that ''Aladdin'' borrowed from ''it'' than the other way around.
31* There was a rumor that Georges Danton's design in the 2011 Hungarian film ''Animation/TheTragedyOfMan'' was based on their highly controversial populist prime minister Viktor Orbán, who had then recently seized power. While the film's director Creator/MarcellJankovics ''was'' a supporter of Orbán, sharing similar extreme nationalist, conservative and illiberal views, and Orbán ''did'' admit he had wanted to use Jankovics's influence for political gain, the movie had been in production since the 80s and Danton's scene was animated in 1991. At that point, Orbán looked different, was far less famous and still promoted completely different politics.
32* In the original ''WesternAnimation/TheTransformersTheMovie'', released in 1986, Devastator, formed from a combination of the six Constructicons, was featured as the most powerful of the Decepticons. This was because when production began on the movie, there were no other combiners, but by the time the movie came out, others had already been introduced in the toyline and even featured on ''WesternAnimation/TheTransformers'' TV show (which led to Devastator undergoing a severe case of VillainDecay). This is also the reason why the film doesn't really feature any of the characters who had become important in the second season (the sole exceptions were Perceptor and the Coneheads)[[note]]IDW's Comic Book adaptation would later explain that the Special Teams and Omega Supreme were fighting at the Ark at the time[[/note]].
33* While they'd been notorious for their string of [[DuelingMovies loose copycat productions of Pixar films]], only once was Creator/DreamWorksAnimation able to use this trope to beat another film to the punch: ''WesternAnimation/TheWild'', an obscure [[InternationalCoproduction co-production]] between Disney and an [[Creator/COREDigitalPictures independent Canadian company]], had been in the works for six years before [=DreamWorks=] made its pre-emptive strike with the suspiciously similar (and more heavily stylized) ''WesternAnimation/Madagascar1''. Like ''The Thief and the Cobbler'' example above, the end result was the movie in production first released ''after'' the film that borrowed its concept became hugely successful, resulting in the ''original'' being accused of being a ripoff.
34[[/folder]]
35
36[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
37* ''Film/ChipNDaleRescueRangers2022'' features characters from ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'', when the show in question ended three years before the film's release and when [[WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyANewGeneration a new generation of the franchise]] had just begun.
38* The Wrestling/{{WCW}} film ''Film/ReadyToRumble'' has a few instances of this.
39** The character of Titus Sinclair is a SuspiciouslySimilarSubstitute for Wrestling/EricBischoff, who was let go from the company in September 1999. By the time the film released in April 2000, Bischoff had returned to the company.
40** Wrestling/DiamondDallasPage was one of the film's antagonists due to the fact that he was a {{heel}} during production. Page had turned {{face}} again right before the film's release.
41** Some of the wrestlers and talent who appear were also gone by the time the film released, such as Wrestling/PerrySaturn (who left in January of 2000) and some of the Nitro Girls; The Nitro Girls as a concept was even ended literal days before the film's release.
42** The Wrestling/WCWMondayNitro set had been redesigned by the time the film released.
43* The Creator/ChuckJones animated segment in ''Film/StayTuned'' had already been in production for six months by the time filming had officially commenced in October of 1991.
44* The ''Film/TransformersFilmSeries'' had a different production timeline to the toys, which resulted in a number of discrepancies between the toys and how [[ShowAccuracyToyAccuracy they were represented in the films]]. This was different from the norm, as the TV shows were typically developed in [[MerchandiseDriven response to the toyline]] or more in conjunction. Optimus Prime got a major redesign about a year before the first movie came out and his major toy was notably different (mostly in the transformation scheme, but was close enough to be a decent figure for the character) while the original Megatron head design was redesigned after fan outcry four months before the movie and toys were set to release, but was a simple enough retool to get things in line by then. Later toylines like the Toys/TransformersStudioSeries were able to boast about being more representative of the on-screen designs.
45[[/folder]]
46
47[[folder:Magazines]]
48* In 2003, ''Magazine/{{Mad}}'' released an issue that featured one comic that took potshots at the sitcom ''Series/EightSimpleRules''. There is generally a few months for the magazine to go from concept to published issue. As a result, the issue in question ended up coming out a just few weeks after the sitcom's star, Creator/JohnRitter, died suddenly due to an aortic dissection, resulting in complaints over the "too soon" nature of the issue.
49[[/folder]]
50
51[[folder:Newspaper Comics]]
52* Fans of the bygone comic strip ''ComicStrip/TheBoondocks'' may regret that the [[WesternAnimation/TheBoondocks TV series]] couldn't joke about current events nearly so much. The lead-time in the comics was lampshaded shortly before the 2000 Presidential Election, where Huey laments that the candidate he was rooting for doesn't stand a chance. Aaron [=McGruder=], meanwhile, keeps leaving comments at the bottom of the panels apologizing because he has to draw out the strips a couple of months in advance, so the polls may have changed in that time. Then at the end, it's revealed that the candidate Huey was rooting for was Ralph Nader, causing Aaron [=McGruder=] to admit that the polls for him probably didn't change after all.
53* Newspaper comics are often written a long time in advance -- usually around eight weeks for dailies and 12 weeks for Sunday strips -- which can cause problems for more topical comics like ''ComicStrip/{{Doonesbury}}'', as [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] [[http://images.ucomics.com/comics/db/2008/db080830.gif here]]. Garry Trudeau works two weeks away from deadline, closer than any other syndicated cartoonist. He also has a hired inker, which cuts back on production time. Generally speaking, this keeps things relevant.
54* One ''ComicStrip/{{Foxtrot}}'' comic published in the 90s had Jason and Peter discussing a cartoonist who got in trouble for missing a deadline and his editors demanding he write a bigger backlog. When Jason asks how long a backlog he has to make, Paige comes in and asks if they've heard about Watergate.
55* The infamous "National Stupid Day" strip of ''ComicStrip/{{Garfield}}'' ran on Veterans' Day 2010 and was immediately deemed offensive. Jim Davis apologized for the strip saying that the strip was drawn and written in advance and that his son is a veteran and he meant no disrespect.
56* The day after the final ''ComicStrip/{{Peanuts}}'' strip ran in papers, ''ComicStrip/ForBetterOrForWorse'' ran a strip wishing [[Creator/CharlesMSchulz Charles Schulz]] a happy retirement. The problem was [[{{Retirony}} Schulz died the day before his final strip ran, so he never got to see it.]]
57[[/folder]]
58
59[[folder:Podcasts]]
60* Acknowledged in the ''Podcast/EscapeFromVaultDisney'' episode about ''Series/Loki2021'', in which they discuss the third episode of the show shortly after the episode was released, yet the podcast would not release to the public until after the entire first season was out. This made all speculation instantly dated, and their success with their predictions was better than one would expect, but is still considerably off the mark from reality.
61[[/folder]]
62
63[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
64* ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'':
65** The game begins design roughly two years ahead of their release, and while there's time for some art and design changes before release they're mostly locked in eight months before their release. This means that it takes about two years for things that players feel very strongly about, be it positive or negative, are added or removed from the design space. The most notable time this happened was when they released an "epilogue set" for ''March of the Machine'', which was meant to represent a wrap-up of the past year's story and hint at what was to come. In actuality the set was overpriced and only contained a few popular cards and the entire fanbase turned against it, to the point that the company's official statement was that the set was "hated". However, by that time they had already completed ''another'' epilogue set for the following year's ''Outlaws of Thunder Junction'', and they had to scramble to find a way to fold those cards into the main set.
66** ''Universes Beyond'', an imprint for products that are explicit adaptations of other [=IPs=] into ''Magic'' products, has a longer lead time of three years or more because the design team must work alongside representatives from another company instead of being able to do everything internally. For example, the ''Series/DoctorWho'' decks were designed just in time to include elements from Series 13, but none of the 2022 or 2023 specials.
67[[/folder]]
68
69[[folder:Toys]]
70* As of the 2020’s, it takes roughly two years for a new ''Franchise/{{Transformers}}'' toy to go from design to being sold on the shelves. The absolute deadline for a design to be finalized for a toy is roughly a year. By 2022, Hasbro noticed divisive to negative reception from fans disappointed with the redesigns of characters from ''WesternAnimation/TransformersPrime'' who were receiving toys in the ''Legacy'' toyline, as the stylized character designs were toned down to look more like Sunbow animation models from ''WesternAnimation/TheTransformers''. Thus, they began to work hard to find a better compromise between the stylized designs of ''Prime'' as well as ''WesternAnimation/TransformersAnimated'', which bore fruit in 2023 when new toys of ''Prime'' Skyquake, Dreadwing, and ''Animated'' Prowl leaned much more into them while still looking like they could fit among the rest of the toyline’s primarily G1 aesthetic.
71[[/folder]]
72
73[[folder:Video Games]]
74* Although ''VideoGame/DetectivePikachu'' was released in 2018, well after ''[[VideoGame/PokemonSunAndMoon Pokémon Sun and Moon]]'' came out, no Pokémon from those games appear in the first three chapters. This is because it was in development since at least 2013, when ''[[VideoGame/PokemonXandY Pokémon X and Y]]'' were the most recent games, and thus those chapters were written with that in mind. The fourth chapter and onwards do contain Pokémon introduced in ''Sun and Moon'', although in a slightly smaller amount compared to those introduced in other games. Likewise, ''VideoGame/DetectivePikachuReturns'' was announced in May of 2019 and released in October of 2023. As a result, it contains no Pokémon from ''[[VideoGame/PokemonScarletandViolet Pokémon Scarlet and Violet]]'', which came out in the intervening four years.
75* When ''VideoGame/HaloCombatEvolved'' released on November 15th, 2001, many interpreted the game's plot, with [[UnitedSpaceOfAmerica United States themed soldiers]] fighting back ScaryDogmaticAliens who had recently attacked one of humanity's major colonies, as commentary on UsefulNotes/TheWarOnTerror. Bungie shot down these assumptions by noting that the overwhelming majority of the game's development occurred ''before'' 9/11 (it had been in development since 1997).
76* ''[[VideoGame/LegoStarWars LEGO Star Wars III: The Clone Wars]]'', based on [[WesternAnimation/StarWarsTheCloneWars the show of the same name]], was released around the show's third season, but it only covers the first two seasons. As a result, a few details are missing, the most notable being that Darth Maul is labeled as a "Classic" character and uses his design from ''Film/ThePhantomMenace'', despite Maul making a [[UnexpectedCharacter surprise return]] in Season 3, becoming a major villain for the rest of the series.
77* As ''VideoGame/MarvelVsCapcom3'' had its roster decided on before ''Super VideoGame/StreetFighterIV'' came out, its ''Street Fighter IV'' representative was C. Viper, being the closest of ''IV''[='=]s newcomers to an EnsembleDarkHorse. After ''Super'' released, however, Juri overtook her, leading to C. Viper's inclusion feeling awkward by the time the game came out, and even more so after its ''Ultimate'' UpdatedRerelease.
78* ''VideoGame/MonsterHunter'': This is typically less of an issue between the console and handheld installments in the series, which are each handled by separate development teams, since there's a lot of communication and idea sharing between them; this allows a game to include monsters and hunting areas from another that was released a year or slightly less prior (for example, ''[[VideoGame/MonsterHunter3Tri Monster Hunter 3 Ultimate]]'' quickly adopted many monsters and features from ''VideoGame/MonsterHunterPortable3rd'' which was released just one year prior and developed by the handheld team).[[note]]In fact, there was even a game, ''[[VideoGame/MonsterHunterFreedom2 Monster Hunter Freedom Unite]]'', that included monsters and content from the SpinOff ''VideoGame/MonsterHunterFrontier'', which was handled by yet another development team and had only been released 8 months prior[[/note]] However, ''VideoGame/MonsterHunterWorld'' (released in 2018) was very unlucky in this regard: Its development began in early 2014, but because of its secluded planning phase and the time required to incorporate the monsters' skeletons into the physics of the then-new graphical engine for the series, the game prescinded from all sorts of content featured in the fourth-generation and late third-generation games, with the exception of the Insect Glaive and Charge Blade weapon classes. For this reason, someone who hasn't played too many MH games would have thought at first that the game's predecessor was ''VideoGame/MonsterHunter3Tri'' (released in ''2009'') due to the presence of Barroth, Uragaan and Deviljho; rather than ''VideoGame/MonsterHunterGenerations Ultimate'' (released in 2017, only one year before ''World'' itself). The ''Iceborne'' expansion rectified this by adding newer veterans like Zinogre, Brachydios (including its Raging variant in a post-release update), and Glavenus.
79* ComicStrip/{{Garfield}} is included in ''VideoGame/NickelodeonAllStarBrawl'', but because Nickelodeon had yet to announce details about his Nicktoon adaptation, his moveset mostly references the newspaper comic, previous video game appearances, and ''WesternAnimation/GarfieldAndFriends''. His inclusion in the game wasn't necessarily about promoting an upcoming show anyway; rather, it was simply because [[AwesomeDearBoy the devs wanted to include him]].
80* The October 2018 game ''VideoGame/NickelodeonKartRacers'' uses the [[WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles2012 old 2012]] designs for the Franchise/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles, not their ''WesternAnimation/RiseOfTheTeenageMutantNinjaTurtles'' designs, due to that series premiering in September 2018. Oddly, the sequel still uses the 2012 designs, while all Nickelodeon games since 2021's ''VideoGame/NickelodeonAllStarBrawl'' feature the [[WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles1987 1987 designs]]. This makes 2019's ''Super Brawl Universe'' (a mobile game, rather than a proper console release) the only Nickelodeon game to feature the ''Rise'' designs.
81* ''[[VideoGame/Sonic3AndKnuckles Sonic the Hedgehog 3]]'' was locked into releasing in February of 1994 due to a [[KidsMealToy McDonald's promotion]], but as the game expanded in scope and its lead time increased, it became clear that it wasn't going to be complete by then. Rather than delaying the promotion, Sega instead split the game into two parts, releasing the first half in February as scheduled and the second half in October.
82* ''VideoGame/SuperSmashBros'': Each installment takes roughly two years to develop, from the finalization of the planning document to the release of the base game. As such, the final product tends to feature characters or references that have become less relevant once the game is released (or completely lack ones that fans would expect). Later entries do attempt to avert this by asking other Nintendo development teams about their upcoming projects, but since those games are ''also'' in the midst of development, [[EarlyDraftTieIn that can cause some issues in and of itself]].
83** ''VideoGame/SuperSmashBrosMelee'' has very little in the way of [=GameCube=]-era content, only having a handful of trophies referencing games and characters from contemporary titles such as ''VideoGame/LuigisMansion'' and ''VideoGame/Pikmin2001''.
84** ''VideoGame/SuperSmashBrosBrawl'', released in January 2008, features no content from ''VideoGame/SuperMarioGalaxy'', which was released in November 2007, due to the two games having mostly-concurrent development cycles. It's only briefly mentioned in the game's Chronicle, so the game instead treats ''VideoGame/SuperMarioSunshine'' as the latest console-based mainline ''Mario'' game and ''VideoGame/NewSuperMarioBros1'' as the latest handheld one. For the same reason, content on ''VideoGame/MetroidPrime3Corruption'' is nonexistent (only having a mention in the Chronicle), so the newest ''Metroid'' content in the game is as of ''VideoGame/MetroidPrime2Echoes'' (console, 2004) and ''VideoGame/MetroidPrimeHunters'' (handheld and overall, 2006). In both cases, this also affects the information recorded in the trophy descriptions, as many enemies and characters that appear in past ''Mario'' and ''Metroid'' games would also return in ''Galaxy'' and ''Corruption'' respectively, yet this isn't acknowledged in the tabs citing the characters' "latest" appearances (and the aforementioned information is also preemptively outdated).
85** During development of ''VideoGame/SuperSmashBrosForNintendo3DSAndWiiU'', Sakurai decided against making [[VideoGame/TheMysteriousMurasameCastle Takamaru]] playable due to Western unfamiliarity. The game was being developed when Nintendo was making this less of an issue, as ''The Mysterious Murasame Castle'' was the subject of a ''VideoGame/NintendoLand'' minigame and got an international release on the 3DS Virtual Console.
86** ''VideoGame/SuperSmashBrosUltimate'':
87*** Despite ''VideoGame/Splatoon2'' coming out a year and a half before ''Ultimate'', the bulk of ''Franchise/{{Splatoon}}'' content is based on the first game, with ''2'''s inclusion being limited to Mii costumes, spirits, and music. This is especially noticeable with the Inkling character themselves, whose moveset not only has zero reference to the second game, but their Final Smash is the Killer Wail; a special attack that did not return in the sequel.
88*** The base roster and first set of DLC in ''Ultimate'' were locked in before the release dates of ''VideoGame/{{ARMS}}'' and ''VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles2'', so they had to compromise by representing them with Mii costumes, spirits, and music. Characters and extra content overall from both games were eventually included in the second set of DLC.
89*** [[Franchise/KingdomHearts Sora]] joined the roster as the final ''Ultimate'' DLC character in 2021, but due to how long negotiations took, only minimally references ''VideoGame/KingdomHeartsIII'', which was released in 2019.
90* [[ZigZaggedTrope Zig Zagged]] with ''VideoGame/TotalWarWarhammerIII''.
91** Given the five year SequelGap between it and the [[VideoGame/TotalWarWarhammerII previous installment]], several units in the game had their tabletop models updated by Games Workshop. While some (mostly among the Daemons of Chaos, who were introduced in the game) were able to use their updated models[[note]]Even the Lord of Change, which had an EarlyBirdCameo in the [[VideoGame/TotalWarWarhammer first game]], was able to have its updated model, though it had to be altered slightly to match the original skeleton[[/note]], a few units (Sigvald the Magnificent, Blood Knights, Black Coaches, and Lord Kroak) were not changed due to a combination of already being in the game and having their models updated in the context of ''TabletopGame/WarhammerAgeOfSigmar'' (e.g., in Sigvald's case, his new model reflects his [[DemonOfHumanOrigin ascension into Daemonhood]] in the ''Age of Sigmar'' setting, and does not reflect him during his time in the Old World). The most egregious case so far is Be'lakor the Dark Master, the BigBad of the third game, who uses his original model rather than his updated model (which was revealed in March 2021, a month after the game's reveal) despite the fact that as a daemon his appearance would not have changed between the settings.
92** The trilogy's depiction of the Zoats. The Zoats were added to the game in ''The Twisted and the Twilight'' DLC released in December 2020 for the second game, the same year Zoats were reintroduced by Games Workshop into their GaidenGames such as ''TabletopGame/BloodBowl'' and ''TabletopGame/BlackstoneFortress''. However, despite all three appearances occurring in the same year, the Zoats in the trilogy are inaccurate when compared to the miniatures, due to being less stockily built. While one could interpret this as a case of [[PropRecycling asset reuse]] (the Zoats reuse the Dragon Ogre skeleton), one could also argue that the new Zoat design was not available for the use of the developers at that point.
93* A video game based on ''Series/WhoWantsToBeAMillionaire'' was released for the DS and Wii on October 5, 2010. It used the clock-based format introduced in 2008... and retired ''three weeks before the game came out'', in favor of one where the categories and money amounts were randomly shuffled. It's likely the clock-based format's replacement occurred too late in development for the developers to completely redo that section.
94[[/folder]]
95
96[[folder:Web Video]]
97* High Score was a shortlived animated series from Matt Wilson, originally competing with Homestar Runner. The characters were later redesigned for ''WebAnimation/BonusStage'', which used a simpler style in order to allow a faster release cycle, necessary for Matt to keep pace as the show's creator, writer, animator, voice actor (of every character barring a few exceptions toward the end of the show's run), sound designer, etc.
98* ''WebAnimation/ZeroPunctuation'' dealt with this when Yahtzee made his "Top 5 Games of 2015" which also had a category for the five [[SoOkayItsAverage blandest]] games, which was similar to the "Mediocre Awards" that ''WebVideo/{{Jimquisition}}'' had done around the same time.
99-->'''Yahtzee:''' Hmm, what's that? [{{beat}}] Jim Sterling just did something like this? Well, it's a good thing everyone knows that I write these a few weeks in advance, isn't it? Otherwise, they might have accused me of ripping him off! And made complete fucking fools of themselves!
100* [[WebAnimation/TeamFortress2 Meet the Pyro]] revealing that ''VideoGame/TeamFortress2''[='=]s Pyro sees the world as a SugarBowl complete with "Balloonicorns" was accused of being pandering to [[WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic Bronies]] by detractors. The plan to have the short show how the Pyro sees the world of ''[=TF2=]'' differently was already finalized by March 2010, months before ''Friendship Is Magic'' started airing let alone being known for having a PeripheryDemographic.
101[[/folder]]
102
103[[folder:Western Animation]]
104* The British series ''WesternAnimation/TwoDTV'' was an animated satire on the week's events, which obviously needed to be animated as quickly and cheaply as possible, leading to errors that couldn't be fixed in time for transmission.
105* ''WesternAnimation/TheAdventuresOfJimmyNeutronBoyGenius'': Each episode was completed in 2-3 weeks, resulting in the series being finished at the end of 2003, but it could take years for an episode to finally air. Season 3 occasionally featured a song similar to [[Music/OutKast "Hey Ya!"]] in montage scenes, and the episode "[[Recap/TheAdventuresOfJimmyNeutronBoyGeniusS3E4LightsCameraDanger Lights! Camera! Danger!]]" doesn't reference any movie newer than ''WesternAnimation/FindingNemo'' and has a ShoutOut to ''Franchise/TheMatrix'' after ''Film/TheMatrixRevolutions'' killed its popularity.
106* ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingWorldOfGumball'' gave an in-universe example in the Christmas episode "[[Recap/TheAmazingWorldOfGumballS3E26TheLie The Lie]]". With Elmore suffering from post-Christmas blues, Gumball [[FictionalHoliday makes up another holiday]] on the spot which is Christmas in all but name and the rest of the town goes along with it. That same night, his family settles down to watch the "Sluzzle Tag" special, a [[StylisticSuck hastily cobbled-together]] few seconds of two CG-animated skeletons which abruptly cut off mid-sentence.
107--> '''Announcer:''' "Unfortunately, animation is a lengthy process and that's all we've had time to make. Jolly Sluzzle Tag."
108* ''WesternAnimation/AmericanDad'':
109** This is one of the reasons why the show underwent reverse IssueDrift and moved away from topical political satire and more towards over-the-top and relatively apolitical {{Farce}}. The showrunners stated that it could take upwards of two years from an episode being written to being broadcast, which forces episodes to be written in a more timeless manner. They [[https://tv.avclub.com/comedy-showrunners-week-american-dad-s-co-creators-on-1798233675 cited a joke made early on]] in the show's run about White House counsel Harriet Miers that was so outdated by the time it actually aired that the showrunners themselves forgot who she was and had to look her up online.
110** The episode "Stan Fixes a Shingle" has a B-plot that focuses on Hayley, Jeff and Roger going to see Creator/{{Gallagher}} perform, and later return his mallet before his next show. Gallagher died on November 11, 2022, while the episode aired on May 22, 2023, so he would have been alive during most of the show's production period and his death likely occurred too late in production to change the subplot. Gallagher's death didn't go entirely unacknowledged, since one of the characters asks "Isn't Gallagher dead?" and at the end of the episode, [[spoiler:Jeff runs Gallagher over with his van, killing him.]]
111* ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}'': "Hooray for North Hollywood" (aired 1998) has a line about "Bronfman's play for the MCA", which was news (at least in the entertainment world) in ''1995''.
112* {{Lampshaded}} in ''WesternAnimation/Animaniacs2020''. In the "Catch Up Song", Yakko sings about the Presidents of the United States that came after UsefulNotes/BillClinton, mentioning UsefulNotes/GeorgeWBush, UsefulNotes/BarackObama, and UsefulNotes/HillaryRodhamClinton's loss to UsefulNotes/DonaldTrump. Yakko stops the song briefly to point out that [[BreakingTheFourthWall at the time the song was written in 2018, Trump was still in office]], thus they had no idea if Trump was still President in November 2020, when the series finally aired on Creator/{{Hulu}}. The Warners then decide to spend the next few verses making wild guesses about what else may have occurred in those intervening two years.
113* ''WesternAnimation/{{Arthur}}'':
114** The special "It's Only Rock 'n Roll", guest starring the Music/BackstreetBoys, has a 2002 copyright date, but was presumably produced sometime prior to then given that the Backstreet Boys are shown in their white outfits from the cover of their ''Millennium'' album, which was already close to four years old by then. Plus, the Boys were on hiatus at the time the episode was broadcast.
115** The VerySpecialEpisode made in reaction to the 2012 Hurricane Sandy disaster, "Shelter From The Storm", featured a hurricane called Hurricane Sadie and came out in 2015, which was ''3 years later''. In comparison, "April 9th" only came out a year after 9/11.
116** The special ''WesternAnimation/ArthursFirstDay'' first aired in late 2021, and was the first ''Arthur'' media to air following the announcement over the summer that the series would be coming to an end in 2022. With how ''Arthur's First Day'' featured some notable changes to the status quo such as Arthur and D.W. actually advancing to the next school year, many assumed this was an intentional move to start to give fans closure about the end being in sight; however, social media posts by the cast members revealed that the GrandFinale had actually finished recording in ''2019''. The airing of ''Arthur's First Day'' shortly after the announcement was a complete coincidence as production on the show had already been done for three years.
117* The Finnish animated series ''The Autocrats'' was a CGI-animated comedy series about the (largely fictional) lives of the members of the Finnish parliament. Its topical nature meant that each episode had to be created in just a week, so the CGI was relatively basic.
118* ''WesternAnimation/TheFairlyOddParents'' episode "Certified Super Sitter" has Timmy's parents making a reference to the Vine app, a short-form video hosting service. The service was shut down on January 17, 2017, and the episode first aired on Nicktoons a day later on January 18. Twitter announced Vine would shut down on October 27, 2016, several months prior to its airing, so the app still would have been in operation during most of the show's production period, and the announcement of its shutdown likely occurred too late in production for the voice actors to re-record the line to remove the reference.
119* ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'':
120** The episode "[[Recap/FamilyGuyS7E7OceansThreeAndAHalf Ocean's 3½]]" managed to do a joke about Christian Bale's ClusterFBomb within two weeks after the audio was first released, by quickly animating a reel-to-reel tape player playing clips of said outburst interspliced with Peter Griffin reacting as if he were the one Bale was berating. This was cut out in later airings of the episode and the DVD release, and was replaced with Quagmire's cutaway involving wanting to make an underwhelming thriller starring Jeff Bridges and Laura Linney.
121** They did something similar in "[[Recap/FamilyGuyS15E3AmericanGiggolo American Gigg-olo]]" with the Donald Trump tapes, dubbing it (and Peter's reaction) over footage of the bus. Like the above example, it too was cut from later airings and the DVD release and was replaced by a cutaway involving an animal sobriety checkpoint.
122** Played straight with "[[Recap/FamilyGuyS8E5HannahBanana Hannah Banana]]", which aired two years after the event it adapts (the "Best of Both Worlds" concert tour that was notorious for selling out nationwide almost ''immediately'' after tickets went on sale).
123** An alternate scene from the animatic of "[[Recap/FamilyGuyS10E5BackToThePilot Back to the Pilot]]" was likely altered for this reason. In the alternate timeline where Brian is the author of the Harry Potter series, rather than Lois saying a pseudo-spell phrase, she said that she couldn't wait for the next book. This episode came out in 2011, well after the last book and movie had come out.
124** "[[Recap/FamilyGuyS10E6Thanksgiving Thanksgiving]]" revolves around Kevin Swanson abandoning his post during the Iraq War. The war had actually ended about a month before the episode premiered.
125** "[[Recap/FamilyGuyS11E2RatingsGuy Ratings Guy]]" has Mayor West destroy all of Peter's Nielsen boxes after he added a second tree to ''Series/OneTreeHill''. That show had actually aired its final season at the start of 2012, well before this episode premiered.
126** The episode "[[Recap/FamilyGuyS15E5ChrisHasGotADateDateDateDateDate Chris Has Got A Date Date Date Date Date]]" mocks Music/TaylorSwift for only writing melodramatic breakup songs. That sort of joke was quite popular circa 2010-2013. However, the episode came out in ''2016'', by which point Taylor's ''Music/NineteenEightyNine'' album had subverted and [[LampshadeHanging lampshaded]] her old formulas to a sufficient point that most no longer saw them as relevant.
127** The opening to "[[Recap/FamilyGuyS7E9TheJuiceIsLoose The Juice is Loose]]" claims as much, stating that it was a "lost" episode from 2007, ostensibly because by the time it aired in March 2009, its subject matter - Creator/OJSimpson moving into Quahog and becoming friends with Peter, who then has to convince the rest of the town that he's not as bad as the 1994 murder trials made him out to be - was [[UnintentionalPeriodPiece already dated]], with Simpson having been jailed just a few months prior over armed robbery and kidnapping.
128** "[[Recap/FamilyGuyS19E1StewiesFirstWord Stewie's First Word]]" has Peter asking a Magic 8-Ball if Fox is viable in an age of streaming; to which it responds by exploding. The episode was produced for season 18 but aired as part of in season 19, at which point, it aired after Fox Corporation acquired Creator/{{Tubi}}.
129* ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'':
130** Admitted on the commentary track for episode "300 Big Boys", which was based off a big tax refund that, when it happened, was quite a big deal... but then came September 11th. By the time the episode aired in June 2003, viewers either didn't know or didn't care about the reference.
131** On the commentary for "Teenage Mutant Leela's Hurdles" the writers also admit that the joke they wrote in early 2001 about Florida being known for recounts was no longer as relevant by the time the episode aired in March 2003.
132** "Related To Items You've Viewed" features extensive satire of Creator/{{Amazon}}, which did remain relevant when the episode aired in 2023 as the company has been seen as a monopolistic megacorp. Less timely, however, was the specific satire around Amazon's voice-activated virtual home assistant device, Alexa. In ''Futurama'', "Invasa" makes so much money and amasses so much power that it assimilates the entire universe into it. In real life, Alexa was described by Amazon as "a colossal failure of imagination" as having led to a $10 ''billion'' loss in 2022 due to their inability to be profitable, and with Amazon, Google, and other competitors to downsize development of their respective virtual assistant products, the overall future of such devices is looking rather grim.
133* ''WesternAnimation/KevinSpencer'': "Home Improv-ment" has Anastasia and Vivica attending "Lilthe Fest"-- a parody of the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lilith_Fair Lilith Fair]], which took place over a few summers in the [=1990s=]; the episode would air in October 2003.
134* ''WesternAnimation/KingOfTheHill'' episodes apparently took a while to make, considering that they were airing hand-drawn episodes until its eighth season in 2003, where they switched to digital ink and paint (for reference, many cartoons switched from traditional cels to digital ink and paint in the early 2000s). Then there's the episode "Lost in [=MySpace=]" which dealt with the Strickland Propane crew discovering [=MySpace=]. This episode didn't air until the end of 2008, when [=MySpace=] was declining in popularity. Fortunately, this is TruthInTelevision, as rural communities like Arlen are often behind the times and don't embrace modern trends until after they've been established as commonplace elsewhere.
135* ''WesternAnimation/MyLittlePonyFriendshipIsMagic'':
136** The second season finale [[MerchandiseDriven cashed in]] on the 2011 Royal Wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton, by having its own wedding in-universe. Except the first season hadn't even aired ''its'' finale at the time. The two-part episode "A Canterlot Wedding" aired a full year later.
137** [[SuperMode Rainbow Power]] ponies began appearing in the show's toyline a full year before the show itself would debut them in the Season 4 finale.
138* ''WesternAnimation/TheProudFamily'' episode "[[Recap/TheProudFamilyS1E5EZJackster EZ Jackster]]" plot revolves around music piracy, with the website at the center of it being heavily based on peer-to-peer file sharing site Napster (and ''Film/TheMatrix''). By the time the episode came out, Napster (well, the original brand) was forcibly shut down just months prior.
139* One episode of ''WesternAnimation/RobotChicken'' did a LampshadeHanging on this. During a spoof of the film ''Film/IntoTheBlue'' - which consisted entirely of the characters [[CaptainObvious making general statements about themselves]] (e.g. "I'm in a bikini!" "I do ''lots'' of situps.") and awkwardly-forced {{title drop}}s - Seth Green (in stop-motion animated form) interrupted the skit to briefly explain how animation takes time and therefore some skits may be irrelevant, since they would have had next to nothing to go on regarding the film when they were actually writing it several months beforehand. He then went on to state (with obvious irony) that he was confident that by now, ''Into the Blue'' had become a box office hit and won several Academy Awards, then closed by apologizing for any inconvenience.
140* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' plays with this. They often try to overdub relevant jokes after the finished animation is back from its overseas production.
141** They make it obvious on some occasions, such as the Super Bowl episode "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS10E12SundayCruddySunday Sunday, Cruddy Sunday]]"; the names of the teams were only said once, with Homer's and Moe's mouths covered, and the overdub doesn't match the scene's audio. They also took some potshots at the then-current Lewinsky scandal, where the status of Bill Clinton's presidency was clearly overdubbed as well as the status of his marriage.
142** They ''try'' to overcome it with overdubs and lampshade hanging, but they still fall victim to this trope big time. Combined with the occasional tendency of episodes to air a season or more after they were completed -- due to Fox's seasons and ''Simpsons'' production seasons not always lining up -- this trope has (for instance) caused parody episodes to be released ''years'' after the works they were mocking. Case in point, "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS9E19SimpsonTide Simpson Tide]]", a parody of the 1995 film ''Crimson Tide'', was first shown in 1998[[note]]The episode was actually produced as part of the 1995-96 season, but was held over for a very long time[[/note]].
143** In one episode, several [[ShowWithinAShow Itchy and Scratchy]] cartoons are shown in quick succession, all parodying films at least a year old. Krusty then hangs a huge lampshade on it, asking why they're parodying movies that old, and saying that the animation took too long to make to get it out sooner.
144** One area where the writers are able to be consistently topical is in what [[CouchGag/TheSimpsons Bart writes on the chalkboard]] for the intro to each episode, which the writers use to occasionally address various mistakes or controversies in the episode that aired the week prior, or jokes that otherwise reference real-world events.
145** "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS11E17BartToTheFuture Bart To The Future]]" features a bizarre example looping from a straight example into an aversion, with an infamous joke about a UsefulNotes/DonaldTrump presidency in the distant future. At the time the episode was made, Trump was seeking the Reform Party's 2000 presidential nomination. But by its premiere in March 2000, Trump already suspended his campaign. It became an aversion after he was actually elected president in the 2016 election.
146** According to Al Jean, this was why the show largely avoided making any political jokes during seasons 13 (2001-02) and 14 (2002-03), [[DistancedFromCurrentEvents as the September 11th attacks left politics in such a volatile state that they didn't want any episodes to instantly become dated]]. The only episode during that time that truly satirized American politics was season 14's "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS14E14MrSpritzGoesToWashington Mr. Spritz Goes To Washington]]", which skewers the UsefulNotes/AmericanPoliticalSystem as a whole more than anything else.
147* ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'':
148** The series as a whole is a rare aversion. The StylisticSuck design is so comically simple to animate with industry standard software that, once the show switched over to such programs rather than animating construction paper cutouts by hand, the production time for episodes slowly became shorter and shorter until the creators found that they were now putting together entire episodes from concept to final delivery in a mere ''six days''. Such is the case of the episode "Christmas in Canada", which included references to (and images of) Saddam Hussein's capture ''three days after it happened''.
149** ''South Park'' broke its own record with "About Last Night...", spoofing the results of the 2008 election and the ensuing aftermath that had happened '''the previous night'''. Of course they wrote it assuming Obama's poll lead would translate into victory in the election (which it did) and an easily reworkable plot in case he didn't (and banked on the assumption that if Obama didn't win, an episode of ''South Park'' would go ignored in the ensuing frenzy). The episode "Obama Wins!" aired the day after Obama's reelection in 2012, but the plot of the episode also dealt with [[Creator/{{Disney}} The Walt Disney Company]] purchasing Creator/{{Lucasfilm}}, which had happened a week prior.
150** The seventh episode of Season 20 was originally written under the assumption that Hilary Clinton would win in 2016. When [[FailedFutureForecast Trump won instead]], Matt and Trey had to completely rewrite (and presumably, reanimate) the whole episode in less than a day, as well as change the title-- originally "The Very First Gentleman", it is now known as "Oh, Jeez".
151** The Quintuplets episode was rewritten ''after'' commercials aired to be about the Elián Gonzales situation.
152** When Pope Francis was named ''Time'' magazine's Person of the Year, the episode "The Hobbit", which had him accepting the award, aired the very same day of the announcement.
153** One episode spoofed Bob Saget's hosting style on ''Series/AmericasFunniestHomeVideos''. By the time it aired, he was replaced by John Fugelsang and Daisy Fuentes.
154** After doing a two-parter episode ridiculing ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'', the creators were asked if they were prepared for a battle of wits between the two shows. They responded if the FG team did anything in response they would just let it slide, mostly because their production schedule is so much faster they would have too much of an advantage.
155* The first episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheSpooktacularNewAdventuresOfCasper'' had a gag where Elvis' ghost goes to haunt Lisa Marie, presumably for marrying Michael Jackson. By the time it aired, Lisa Marie and Michael had been divorced for a month.
156* ''Franchise/StarWars'':
157** Creator/IanAbercrombie passed away in early 2012, but had already completed recording most of his lines as Palpatine/Darth Sidious for the fifth season of ''WesternAnimation/StarWarsTheCloneWars'' with the exception of two lines that were dubbed by his successor Creator/TimCurry. The final episode of Season 5 is when Curry fully takes over the role with one exception: an arc in Season 6 that was originally meant to air in Season 5 but got pushed back, produced and recorded before Abercrombie's passing and the subsequent recasting.
158** When it was announced in 2018 that ''The Clone Wars'' was being [[UnCancelled revived for a seventh season]], accusations were lodged at Disney that the company was only bringing back the series to distract from the recent BrokenBase receptions of ''Film/TheLastJedi'' and ''[[Film/SoloAStarWarsStory Solo]]''. However, when the ''Clone Wars'' announcement was made in the months following the latter release, the reveal trailer featured fully-animated footage from one of the episodes, indicating that the revival had been planned for some time and was already in development.
159** Creator/TomKane suffered a stroke in 2020 that unfortunately destroyed his voice and forced him to ultimately retire from voice acting. However, he was able to record one final appearance as the narrator of ''The Clone Wars'' for the series premiere of ''WesternAnimation/StarWarsTheBadBatch'', which aired just a few months before Kane’s daughter announced his retirement.
160* ''WesternAnimation/TeenageMutantNinjaTurtles2003'' infamously suffered a case of ExecutiveMeddling partially because of this. By the time the fourth season finale aired in spring 2006, the fifth season was completed and ready to air in the fall as usual. However, Playmates Toys, in response to the DarkerAndEdgier third and fourth seasons, asked for the show to become lighter in tone, resulting in the LighterAndSofter ''Fast Forward'' retool for the show's sixth season. ''Fast Forward'' was bumped up to air first in fall 2006 to try to increase interest in the series. This resulted in a massive cliffhanger from the end of the fourth season going unresolved in America until 2008 when the fifth season finally aired after the sixth had finished running.
161* ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitansGo'':
162** The RunningGag in "[=BBBDay=]!" is that the Titans can’t sing HappyBirthdayToYou because it's still under copyright. By the time it aired, a ruling invalidated the song's copyright, undermining the main joke of the entire episode. Later episodes have no problems singing the song.
163** "Hey You, Don't Forget About Me In Your Memory" was made with the intention of airing in February 2015 (the anniversary of [[Film/TheBreakfastClub the movie it spoofs]]). The episode aired in September of 2015.
164** "Teen Titans Roar" was a spoof of the ''WesternAnimation/ThunderCatsRoar'' controversy that happened in 2018, but, like the show it was based off, aired in April 2020, although Creator/{{Teletoon}} [[ShortRunInPeru in Canada aired it earlier]].
165** Similar to "Hey You, Don't Forget About Me In Your Memory", "Toddler Titans...Yay!", which spoofs ''WesternAnimation/DoraTheExplorer'', was probably written with the release of ''Film/DoraAndTheLostCityOfGold'' in mind. It wound up being released in November 2020, a year and three months after the movie and at a time when Nickelodeon had taken the show off their channel's schedules.
166** "Cy and Beasty" was likely produced with the release of ''Film/TomAndJerry2021'' in mind, but came out in August 2021, six months after its theatrical release.
167[[/folder]]

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