In the Episode "Blonde and Blonder," Al, Peg, Marcy, and Jefferson play a game called "Bottoms Up," which seems to be a Brand X of Twister. However, it turns out there actually was a board game called "Bottoms Up," though it wasn't a Twister knock-off. Is this noteworthy, and if so, what trope would it fit under?
Hide / Show RepliesTrivia under Accidentally Accurate.
Found a Youtube Channel with political stances you want to share? Hop on over to this page and add them.I question Unsympathetic Comedy Protagonist as it's clear he deserves all the sympathy he can get. In one episode, it's shown that hell without his family, is better then life with them.
This is not exactly an example of On One Condition (see TRS thread at https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/posts.php?discussion=1343065552015465900). Can anybody repurpose it?
- On One Condition: Stymie Bundy, the only male Bundy to be a success, left five hundred thousand dollars to the first male Bundy to have a child born in wedlock named after him.
This quote seems to be fabricated. Nobody can find a source. Might be a Beam Me Up, Scotty! instead.
https://gamefaqs.gamespot.com/boards/225-television-broadcast-tv/78872890