I Think You Should Leave With Tim Robinson / YMMV - TV Tropes (2024)

http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/YMMV/IThinkYouShouldLeaveWithTimRobinson

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  • Aluminum Christmas Trees:
    • The guy in the car focus group keeps requesting a good steering wheel that doesn't fly off while driving. Ford actually issued a recall for this exact problem in 2018.
    • Calico Cut Pants are pants meant to always look like there's urine spots on them. Wet Pants DenimI Think You Should Leave With Tim Robinson / YMMV - TV Tropes (1) is a real store that does just that.
  • Applicability: The common themes of going too far in defense of strange ideas and chafing against what's socially acceptable are familiar to people on the autism spectrum. "Ghost Tour"I Think You Should Leave With Tim Robinson / YMMV - TV Tropes (2) in particular is a surprisingly realistic depiction of an individual on the spectrum struggling to socialize properly in the face of a contradiction between what is explicitly allowed and what he has to infer.
  • Awesome Moments:
    • Scott managing to say his line too fast for Jamie Taco to steal it.
    • Once Tim forbids him from talking about his kids, Jason Schwartzman's character is forced to come up with more interesting conversation starters. As a result, he becomes the life of the party, earning his boss's respect and forming new connections with his coworkers.
  • Awesome Music:
    • "Big Flame (Is Gonna Break My Heart in Two)" by Doris Wilson, the interstitial music for most of the series, is a classic soul track from the 60's that gets used to hilarious effect many times.
    • Despite the Stylistic Suck, "Friday Night" is actually a really nice song.
    • "The Day Robert Palins Murdered Me" is genuinely a pretty kickass song before Tim starts singing about skeletons and stuff.
    • The song that drives Biff Wiff's character to trash a room in the Shirt Brothers sketch is an original Turnstile song, "Listening", with a dangerously catchy chorus. (Robinson is a noted fan of the band.)
  • Harsher in Hindsight: Bob Odenkirk's sketch in Season 2 is a bit harder to watch after he was hospitalized for a small heart attack while filming Better Call Saul.
  • Heartwarming Moments:
    • The sheer jubilation of the biker aliens when they learn about all the motorcycles on Earth (not to mention cars and buses) is hard not to smile at.
    • The end of the baby shower sketch in season 2. The skit quickly goes from the series' tried and true Cringe Comedy to something that kind of resembles a modern day Frank Capra film (albeit still in a completely ludicrous context).
    • Realizing just how sad and self-loathing the guy at the ice cream store really is, and that even his wish-fulfillment fantasies are tragic (being married to a supermodel that's terminally ill; spending time alone because he wants to, not because he is alone), Tim's character not only empathizes, but tries to make his fake reality a little happier than imagined. By the end, both men are near tears.

      Tim: She's sick, but she's going to get better.
      Bob: [Voice cracking] She's gonna get better. And I'm rich.
      Tim: [Softly] He's rich.
      Bob: And I don't live in a hotel.
      Tim: My friend doesn't live in a hotel.
      Bob: I got a good wife.
      Tim: He's got a wife, he's — a perfect one.
      Bob: And the cars.
      Tim: [Almost about to cry] He's got triples of the Barracuda, triples of the Roadrunner... triples of a Nova.
      Bob: [Mimes checking his phone; hopefully] Woah, good. That Nova deal's... a sure thing, now.

    • Scott — clearly troubled when the other guys are cracking wise about their wives during poker night — thinks back to how supportive his own wife was back when Jamie Taco was bullying him in a local theatre production, declares he loves her too much to even jokingly make fun of her, and misses out on the sleepover to go home and spend time with her instead.
    • In "Shirt Brothers" Tim shows genuine sympathy for what Shane is going through after hearing his new favourite song. In return, Shane urges him to return to the auditorium and listen to his daughter's solo; Tim gets back just in time to hear her rap and looks incredibly proud.
  • Hilarious in Hindsight: A movie with a violent, two-fisted Santa Claus, eh? Violent Night firmly makes it a Defictionalization.
  • Memetic Mutation:
    • "Oh my God he admit it!" Explanation
    • "We're all trying to find the guy who did this." Explanation
    • "I'm not even supposed to be here! I hope I don't jack off!" Explanation
    • "I don't even wanna be around anymore." Explanation
    • "I don't know what any of this sh*t is, and I'm f*cking scared."Explanation
    • "55 BURGERS, 55 FRIES, 55 TACOS, 55 PIES, 55 co*kES, 100 TATER TOTS, 100 PIZZAS, 100 TENDERS, 100 MEATBALLS, 100 COFFEES, 55 WINGS, 55 SHAKES, 55 PANCAKES, 55 PEPPERS, 55 PASTAS AND 155 TATERS!" Explanation
  • Nightmare Fuel: "Darmine Doggy Door" suddenly and without warning features a grotesque, shrieking creature with a malformed human face bursting through the flap and into Tim's home. It turns out to be a pig in a Richard Nixon mask sent by Tim's neighbor, and he couldn't perceive it properly because he was sleep-deprived. And then Tim says "for fifty seconds I thought there was monsters on the world".
  • Spiritual Adaptation: It feels a bit like if Clickhole got its own sketch show.
  • The Woobie:
    • Carmine Leguzio gets so overheated under his prosthetics and makeup that he tells his producer that he doesn't want to live anymore.
    • Tim's character in the haunted house sketch just wanted to make friends. Unfortunately, none of the other attendants were amused when he kept asking if the ghosts "just f*cking ji*zz all over the place."
    • Ron Tussbler (age 58) has had such a hard life that he forces himself to laugh for at least 10 minutes a day, so that when he dies and his life flashes before his eyes he'll have at least some time where he's laughing.
    • Assuming Suspiciously Specific Denial is in play, Bob Odenkirk’s character in the ice cream store is a sad, lonely, carless, single man who lives in a hotel.
    • Richard Brecky is a talented actor with a love for silent films, but his passion project is hijacked by a hostile audience of frat boys and bachelor parties who just want to provoke him into talking.
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I Think You Should Leave With Tim Robinson / YMMV - TV Tropes (2024)

FAQs

What does YMMV mean TV tropes? ›

"Your Mileage May Vary", "YMMV", "Your Mileage Might Vary" - or any other form of calling something subjective is bad wiki writing. Opinions, perspectives, disagreements or doubts don't belong in examples or descriptions. Keep them off and Repair, Don't Respond.

What show is Tim Robinson in? ›

Tim Robinson is known for I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson (2019), Saturday Night Live (1975) and Chip 'n Dale: Rescue Rangers (2022).

How old is TV tropes? ›

TV Tropes was founded in 2004 by a programmer under the pseudonym "Fast Eddie." He described himself as having become interested in the conventions of genre fiction while studying at MIT in the 1970s and after browsing Internet forums in the 1990s.

What is the last of their kind TV trope? ›

A character who is a species unto themself, the Sole Survivor of some calamity that has wiped out their entire civilization. If this civilization used to be important in the power balance between civilizations that still remain, it's now considered missing.

What is YMMV slang for? ›

YMMV. (also ymmv) Add to word list Add to word list. written abbreviation for your mileage may vary: used, for example on social media and in text messages and emails, to mean that you understand people may have a different opinion or experience than yours: Their first album is better, but of course YMMV.

What does YMMv mean in urban dictionary? ›

abbreviation for. your mileage may vary: used esp in social media to acknowledge that an opinion is purely subjective.

Is Tim Robinson a vegetarian? ›

11 - Tim is a vegetarian.

Who is Tim Robinson in Invincible? ›

In the seventh episode of Invincible Season 2, Robinson plays Filip Schaff. The Netflix star's voice is so distinct that people familiar with his work immediately pegged his voice. Prime Video even managed to capture the clip in all of its animation satire glory on social media.

Does Tim Robinson have a wife? ›

As a teenager, Robinson began dating his schoolmate, Heather, who now works as an electrical engineer for Chrysler. They were married in September 2006. They live in Los Angeles with their son and daughter. Robinson became an avid skateboarder during high school and continues to skateboard in his spare time.

Why are they called tropes? ›

Origins. The term trope derives from the Greek τρόπος (tropos), 'a turn, a change', related to the root of the verb τρέπειν (trepein), 'to turn, to direct, to alter, to change'; this means that the term is used metaphorically to denote, among other things, metaphorical language.

Why do tropes exist? ›

Tropes are sometimes given a bad name, because they can be mistaken for a cliche. However, tropes are important building blocks of storytelling, especially in genre fiction, because they help set and/or fulfill expectations readers have.

What is the most overused trope? ›

Technobabble, pandemic dystopias, dull planet designs, humanoid aliens, junk science, time loops, evil aliens, evil AI, and outdated attitudes towards female characters are some tropes that can be tiresome and overused in sci-fi movies.

What is the ace trope? ›

So the Ace trope is when a deuteragonist or side character is the living embodiment of “There's Always Someone Better”.

What is a stereotypical trope? ›

A stereotype is a conventional, formulaic, and oversimplified conception, opinion, or image while a trope in literature is something recurring across a genre or type of literature, such as the 'mad scientist' of horror movies or 'once upon a time' as an introduction to fairy tales (similar to an archetype but not ...

What does YMMV mean on Reddit? ›

Your Mileage May Vary. It's a way of saying something might work differently for you.

What does YMMV mean on Facebook? ›

YMMV is an abbreviation for “Your Mileage May Vary.” Basically, it means one person's experience with a product may be different from another's. 1.

What does tropes mean slang? ›

A trope is a word used in a nonliteral sense to create a powerful image. If you say, "Chicago's worker bees buzz around the streets," you're using a trope. Workers aren't literally bees, but it suggests how fast they move. Trope refers to different types of figures of speech, such as puns, metaphors, and similes.

What is age dissonance in TV tropes? ›

An index for characters who act, look, think or is in a position different than what is expected for their chronological/biological age. This also includes behavior patterns that don't match their age. A direct subtrope of Competence Zone and Ageism Tropes.

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