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  • The 10th Kingdom: Roma are friendly and hospitable although wolf warned the others about two rules: 1) Don't eat anything you haven't seen them eating, 2) Never refuse anything, this rule basically meant Tony had to do some really embarrassing singing. They also fit the Gypsy Curse trope but they are hardly unprovoked and magic isn't uncommon in the series.
  • Amor Gitano: The Romani characters were all good. The villains were all nobility. But then, this is an adaptation of The Count of Monte Cristo.
  • Barney Miller: One episode features an elderly Rom caught vandalizing and otherwise harassing a joke and novelty shop owner. He spraypaints the word "murderer" in Romany on the side of the building. It turns out the shop owner is a former officer of the guard at Birkenau, and the old man is one of the few survivors. Det. Harris gives a summary of the Romani Liquidation.
  • The Brittas Empire: The plot of "Curse of the Tiger Women" kicks off when Brittas kicks out a traveller community from the leisure centre. A gypsy woman promptly puts a curse on him, making it so that anyone who eats his food dies
  • Buffyverse:
    • Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Jenny, whose real name is Janna Kalderash, left Romani culture, but her uncle is pretty much the stereotype. They were responsible for Angel's curse. On the plus side, the writers did a decent amount of research: the Kalderash are in fact a major Romani clan.
    • Angel: The CEO of Wolfram & Hart's Roman branch says "The gypsies are filthy people. And we shall speak of them no more."
  • Charmed (1998): An episode reveals that Romani shares the same bloodlines as most witches and is centered on a young Romani medical student trying to access her ancestral magic to put the stomp on the Monster of the Week.
  • Criminal Minds: "Bloodline" centers around a clan of Romani who slaughter families and take the daughters as brides for their pubescent sons; they also do their share of shoplifting and car theft. It's pointed out by Agent Rossi that these people are following a bastardized version of Romani culture.
  • The Doctor Blake Mysteries: In "Sorrow Songs", the murder of a beautiful Romani woman takes Blake inside the intriguing and exotic world of Romani travellers passing through Ballarat. In keeping with the period, they are always referred to as 'gypsies' and the prejudice they face is featured.
  • Dragnet: The stereotypical fortune telling Gypsies shows up a time or two.
  • The Finder: Two of the main characters are Roma and one is half. They're portrayed as a large, close-knit, and patriarchal family with a penchant for scams from bogus mystical to internet fraud. The main pair are trying to figure out how to avoid an Arranged Marriage.
  • Hemlock Grove: A small group of Romani are mystically aware. Peter's a werewolf, his cousin Destiny is a sorceress, and his clan knows more than a few things about vampires and other things in the night.
  • Highlander: Duncan was with the Roma for a while He had a sincere devotion to a Rom girl and planned to marry her, but during a post-coital touch she looked at his palm and grew angry because she saw he'd "love many women but marry none." It was something of a Self-Fulfilling Prophecy as she angrily broke it off with him, accusing him of lying to her and using her, basically a form of rape in the society of the day.
  • House: A Romani patient of the week gets the opportunity from Foreman to study medicine, but he decides to return to his family instead. The show refrains from judgment—though not from comment—showing the man surrounded by a large family while Foreman returns to home to eat alone and read scientific journals.
  • Judging Amy: An episode shows Romani children being sexually exploited because they begin courtship as early as 10. It isn't presenting it as fiction, either. The entire episode feels like a PSA, telling us that the courts can't do anything about it, but every red-blooded American should. They played up the Squick factor by interspacing pictures of real mistreated girls right before and after each commercial break.
  • Kolchak: The Night Stalker: In "Firefall", Kolchak goes to a Romani fortuneteller for advice on how to stop an arsonist ghost.
  • Legion: Gabrielle is a Romani Holocaust survivor. By extension, her son David is half-Romani.
  • MacGyver (1985): The third episode kicks into gear when a young Romani girl pickpockets MacGyver's MacGuffin. She's a thief with a heart of gold, however, and MacGyver ends up helping her family escape Soviet Hungary before giving her his Swiss Army Knife as a farewell present.
  • Murdoch Mysteries: An episode has a Romany camp implicated in a robbery and Inspector Brackenreid pressurised into arresting them by the backers of his mayoral campaign. It turns out to be the son of his main contributor, and Brackenreid quit the mayoral race in disgust when he threatened to withdraw his support if his son was arrested. The main representative of the Roma was a woman who had a sort of resigned amusement when Brackenreid asked if she was Queen of the Gypsies, sarcastically asking if he was King of the Police. On the other hand, she also put a Gypsy Curse on him, but with a slight suggestion she was deliberately playing to the stereotype.
  • NCIS: Los Angeles: Season 2 reveals that Callen's mother was Romani. It's also revealed that he inherited a blood feud with the Comescu family, who are also Romani.
  • Peaky Blinders plays straight, plays with and deconstructs many tropes about the Romani. A major plot point is that the Shelby family, who run the titular gang, are part Romani; their paternal grandfather was supposedly a king among the Romani in Birmingham; their mother is referred to as didicoy (half-blooded Romani); and some of the family (particularly Tommy and Aunt Polly, who are in touch with their roots, and John, whose wife Esme is much more traditionally Romani) speak Romani, although only when they have to. The Shelbys alternately exploit and shun their connection to the Romani, in contrast with the Lee family, who live in caravans and can all speak Romani and do so among themselves. On the other hand, all the other characters consistently refer to the Shelbys as "Gypsies," even though they are at least as Irish as they are Romani, and sometimes even by slurs more often associated with Irish Travellers. And of course, both the Shelbys and the Lees are crime families. With all that, plus the fact that Tommy rises to not only be a quasi-legitimate businessman but also a Member of Parliament, leads to some interesting comparisons to Michael Corleone (which is probably the point).
  • Romaní: The writers do some more research but the Romani aren't amused.
  • Romano-tv: Romani would poke fun at the stereotypes associated with themselves, though most people didn't really see it that way. But they got Eugene Hutz from Gogol Bordello to appear on the show to express support for the show and its agenda.
  • The Secret Adventures of Jules Verne: One episode has a camp of gypsies around an old abbey that are suspected of being involved in the episode's events. They are, but they're not gypsies: They're Prussians in disguise.
  • Soy gitano relies mainly on stereotypes and is openly despised by the real Roma.
  • Utopia: It's revealed that the mysterious scientist who created the virus meant to wipe out most of the human population is Romani and built the virus to spare Romani people. He admits that it was purely a selfish move to choose his own people as the inheritors of the new world.
  • In Van Helsing (2016), recurring villain Oracle was a Roma vampire hunter before being turned into one of the Dark One's brides.
  • Without a Trace: An episode has a clan of "gypsy" con artists involved in a kidnapping, with Tarot, and wandering, and insular secretiveness.
  • Zí­ngara relies mainly on stereotypes and is openly despised by the real Roma.

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