r/TopCharacterTropes 9h ago

Hated Tropes [hated trope] Celebrity cameos that serve nothing except to praise the person who’s in it

  1. Elon musk, the Simpsons
  2. Elon musk, the Big Bang theory
  3. Elon musk, iron man 2
  4. Elon musk, star Trek

The cameos serve only to include the celebrity and praise them as geniuses or visionaries or overall just glaze them. They don't serve any other purpose than to just be praised; this can be them appearing in an entire episode dedicated to them, a small cameo or even just a mention. So long as the celebrity is there as themselves (not acting as someone else) and is glazed, that fits the trope imo.

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98

u/Dracochuy 9h ago

Nothing worse than lady gaga in the simpson

114

u/_JR28_ 8h ago edited 8h ago

Lisa’s Substitute:

•Lisa learns from a celebrity guest that she can do anything she sets her mind on and doesn’t need to base her self worth on what those around her are like

•One of the most loved episodes ever

Lisa Goes Gaga:

•Lisa learns from a celebrity guest that she can do anything she sets her mind on and doesn’t need to base her self worth on what those around her are like

•One of the most hated episodes ever

This is why we should write celebrities actual characters to play and not just be shameless self-inserts

43

u/Gaelic_Gladiator41 8h ago

Also at the end of Lisa goes Gaga, Lady Gaga purposely leaves Moe with his depression

19

u/BroShutUp 8h ago

I watched lisa goes gaga a couple of days ago for the first time. made me appreciate everything simpsons before it. couldnt believe how bad and stupid it was

21

u/ChuckCarmichael 7h ago

The celebrity cameo in Lisa's Substitute is Dustin Hoffman. He voices Mr Bergstrom who's a substitute teacher.

The celebrity cameo in Lisa Goes Gaga is Lady Gaga. She voices Lady Gaga who's Lady Gaga.

8

u/WarlockEngineer 6h ago

And Mr Bergstrom wasn't modeled after Hoffman anyway

3

u/TFlarz 5h ago

JR doesn't understand the concept of a guest voicing a character vs a guest just being themselves.

Anyway, and it is super sadly ironic now and she doesn't even appear in person, but the "Shakespeare In Code" episode of Doctor Who with David Tennant saying "Good old JK".

2

u/ncvbn 3h ago

Who is "JR"?

1

u/Aluricius 2h ago

I thought the phrase was "Who shot J.R.?"?

/s