What Is Funny About People Dressed as Shark Showing Up to Weddings and Other Events

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Jumping the Shark

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As you can see, the telltale trail becomes noticeable only in hindsight...

Jumping the Shark is the moment when an established Long Runner series changes in a significant manner. This can range from something relatively small, like the introduction of a new gimmick, to something that totally changes the show, like a Genre Shift. The point is that the show feels like it has to update in order to stay fresh. But it usually has the opposite effect — the viewers can see through it and realize that the show has finally run out of ideas. It's reached its peak, it'll never be the same again, and it's all downhill from here. In other words, it's Ruined Forever.

The expression comes from the episode of Happy Days in which Fonzie, dressed in his trademark leather jacket, literally jumps over a shark on water skis. Over-the-top and not in keeping with the show's existing tone, it became the point where viewers started panicking that the show was going to change on them, and not for the better. And it didn't get better; Fonzie, at that point an Ensemble Dark Horse, quickly became Flanderized into an increasingly superhuman character who was the very essence of "cool" itself, and overtook the existing protagonists to become the focus of the entire show. But while people liked Fonzie, this didn't make the show better. In fact, it betrayed Fonzie's character development; in an earlier landmark episode, Fonzie is seriously injured while jumping his motorcycle over fourteen barrels in a televised stunt, and he admits that it was stupid of him to have done something so dangerous just to prove his courage. So by jumping the shark, Fonzie has forgotten an important lesson, and the show is now backtracking on what made it compelling, in an effort to stay fresh.

After this, "jumping the shark" entered TV parlance to refer to the moment when the show irreparably changed for the worse. The term was originally coined in the mid-1980s by writer Jon Hein. Notably, it was only after Happy Days ended that anyone truly realised what they had just seen; it's difficult to diagnose a shark-jump immediately after it happens. Many have tried to define a catch-all moment when a show jumps the shark, and many have failed. The term "jumping the shark" was also rather nebulously defined because it could either mean the point at which the show started sliding (which is what happened with Happy Days) or the point of the show's final collapse. Complicating matters is the term "nuking the fridge", named after an infamous scene in Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, whose definition seems to drift around even more than "jumping the shark" but basically amounts to "jumping the shark but for movies"; it seems to have been borne out of a generation who never experienced Happy Days now having their own experience with how frustrating this is. note TV Tropes does not consider "Nuking the Fridge" a separate or well-defined concept from "Jumping the Shark" — in fact, "Nuking the Fridge" as a separate trope and as a redirect to this trope is a member of the Permanent Red Link Club because people kept trying to add it without being able to define it.

"Jumping the shark" is often used to describe a show's last gasp, a drastic change to stay on the air which doesn't work. But a shark jump doesn't necessarily mean the show will quickly end or be cancelled. Happy Days went on for seven years after Fonzie's shark-jumping stunt, with a number of other changes in cast and situations; it was just really boring in those years. It's entirely possible for a show to jump several sharks over the course of its latter years, leading to what we call Seasonal Rot.

How to spot a shark jump

It's difficult to define a shark jump, especially given how commonly the term is used for complaining about plot twists you don't like. But there are a lot of telltale signs, and if you see them, the show had better have some really good writers to pull it off.

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    Cast Changes

  • A popular character is removed from the show or even killed off. The idea is to extract cheap Emotional Torque by making everyone sad that such a great character has left. It happens often enough that it can lead to The Firefly Effect on a character level — viewers don't want to get emotionally invested in characters they like in case they get written out later. It's especially likely to alienate the audience if the method of removal seems unsatisfying or mean-spirited. It most often happens with quiet, introverted, or relatively passive characters (usually The Chick or The Heart), which just makes it even meaner.
  • A character becomes a gimmick. This can happen to an existing Ensemble Dark Horse like Fonzie, or it can be a new character (or not) who is introduced for this reason. The problem with gimmicky characters is that they demand a lot of attention, usually at the expense of existing character dynamics. It's especially problematic if the new character replaces a previous one — and, going back to the above point, if they're replacing a relatively passive character. The new character is usually The Cast Showoff and often Hotter and Sexier.
  • An actor leaves and a character needs to be replaced. Unfortunately, even if it's not the show's fault (e.g. when the actor dies), it's very difficult to pull off and keep the audience engaged. You basically have three options: kill off the character (which forces a significant retool if this character was instrumental to the show's success), go with The Other Darrin (same character, different actor), or go with a Suspiciously Similar Substitute (different actor, different character, same archetype).
  • A child character is added to a cast of adults. It rarely works, because audiences can see through a cheap attempt at adding "cuteness". A particularly insidious variant is where the cast's existing child characters are displaced for the new (younger, cuter) kid.
  • And the presence of Ted McGinley. Okay, that's not exactly fair, but Jon Hein noted his tendency to play characters like this and called him the "patron saint of shark-jumping" — his appearance in a series spelled its doom. These days, he sometimes appears alongside invocations of the shark jump as a kind of Lampshade Hanging.

    Character Development

  • The Scrappy is given more spotlight and screentime, which sometimes exonerates him through character development, but more often turns him into a Creator's Pet. Even if it's a Breakout Character getting attention because the fans demand it, it just leads to the character taking over the show and rarely has a satisfying ending.
  • An existing character evolves in a way that flattens rather than enriches them, or which contradicts prior depictions of said character. This can streamline a character in an appealing way, but more often it offends and alienates the fans.
  • The Official Couple resolves their Unresolved Sexual Tension too early and shippers start to lose interest in the show.
  • The protagonist degenerates into an Invincible Hero — or worse, a Failure Hero. There's just no tension anymore, as it's been pushed aside in favour of gawking at a character.
  • A character forgets a valuable lesson they had learned in the past, usually resulting in them having to learn the same lesson over and over again until the audience loses patience with them.

    Plot Development

  • The show's premise is radically altered, such as having the characters change careers or move to a new location.
  • Conversely, a show which is based on a coherent story arc drags on too long without any sort of progress or resolution. This can happen from over-reliance on Filler, the Reset Button, or Failure Is the Only Option. If the plot is based on a Myth Arc, dragging it out too long or piling plot thread upon plot thread without resolution may lead to fans getting the impression that the writers are just making it up as they go along and subsequently tuning out.
  • The show experiences Mood Whiplash and becomes unbelievable and unrelatable. This often happens when Executive Meddling demands that the show become Darker and Edgier or Lighter and Softer. One easy and particularly jarring way to do this is a drastic change in the Sliding Scale of Villain Threat — you can't just go from destruction of the corner shop to the entire galaxy.
  • One of the writers puts too much of themselves into the show, to its detriment. They may use it as a pulpit to preach their personal beliefs in a heavy-handed manner, or to display personal kinks in a way that unnerves the audience. This usually leads to Author Filibusters, Straw Characters, Issue Drift, and Going Cosmic.
  • A baby is added to an otherwise-adult cast, resulting in the ill-suited addition of childish themes and endless baby talk from characters who were once intelligent adults.
  • The plot is resolved with too many twists or retcons which are inconsistent with the overall narrative, poorly set up, or just plain stupid.
  • The show reaches its Moment of Awesome and has nowhere to go but down.
  • A major plot point is apparently resolved, only to be immediately unresolved over and over again. It's particularly acute with the Official Couple (or Beta Couple) constantly breaking up and getting back together, to the point where it aggravates not only the audience but even the other characters.
  • Obvious lack of effort in the production. This can be an overreliance on the show's formula, an abundance of Bottle Episodes, Recycled Scripts, and blatant Series Continuity Errors. Alternatively, the show goes off the rails and starts getting really weird and off-beat, especially after it's exhausted the formula (like how Happy Days introduced aliens). Either way, it breaks the Willing Suspension of Disbelief.
  • Too Bleak, Stopped Caring: Too much Angst (or worse, Wangst), just for the sake of it, makes the audience lose sympathy for the characters and tune out.
  • A Romance Arc takes over a series that wasn't about that to begin with, becoming a Romantic Plot Tumor.
  • A relatively minor Franchise Original Sin snowballs into something much less easily overlooked.
  • The writer starts undoing plot points which occurred earlier in the series (e.g., via Time Travel, Death Is Cheap, Cloning Gambit, All Just a Dream, Retcons, Multiverse theory, etc.). See Opening a Can of Clones for a detailed explanation.

    Gimmicks

  • The tone becomes Denser and Wackier, which can be especially glaring if the show started with a serious tone.
  • The show starts relying too much on "special guest stars", especially celebrities playing themselves, which wreck the verisimilitude of the show. An episode might even turn into a Non-Actor Vehicle.
  • Graphical gimmicks such as 3D are used to shore up failing character development. In video games, this can be a Scrappy Mechanic. In animated series, this can be an Art Shift that tries to be "cutting-edge" but usually goes the opposite direction.
  • The Movie is released, and the show's creativity level starts to drop. One doesn't necessarily cause the other, but smart executives usually time the release of the film at the peak of the show's popularity, so it's all downhill from there.
  • A gimmick is dropped — if it existed since the beginning and was endearing or otherwise core to the show's appeal.
  • The show starts to tell instead of show — for example, characters get promoted to a higher rank to give the illusion of progress, but we don't see any reason why they should be promoted.
  • A Musical Episode or a Clip Show.
  • The show tries too hard to stay "current", even when it doesn't make any sense, or when the writers are obviously two decades behind the times.
  • The show tries to appeal to a more "mainstream" audience, only to lose its focus and alienate its original fans.
  • Appealing to the Lowest Common Denominator. This usually involves the introduction of lowbrow humor, Slapstick, extra Fanservice, or other forms of turd-polishing. It's most acute with Talk Shows, which might start off as intelligent and erudite but devolve into the daytime ratings king: the Point-and-Laugh Show.
  • Too many sequels or spin-offs, each one less creative than the last.
  • Bait-and-Switch Lesbians. It's remarkably easy for a show to generate cheap hype by teasing the possibility of an LGBT pairing. The executives seem to think that LGBT persons will watch anything that portrays one of them, regardless of quality, out of desperation for positive representation on television. They also think that men will watch anything with lesbians. They milk the relationship for "progressive" hype. And then, to keep the audience that wouldn't like to see that kind of thing, they reveal that they're just friends, roommates, cousins, whatever.

    Behind the Scenes

  • The show changes location. This is often unavoidable for Long-Runners, as early seasons are shot somewhere random because they offer tax incentives, but as the show gets bigger and the actors want more opportunities, they inevitably have to move to Southern California. This often comes with a related gimmick, if the change can't be easily masked and the setting moves with the production.
  • Non-American productions going for Hollywood. This means that whatever charm they may have had is surgically removed to appeal to the American audience, which is not known for being particularly clever. Oddly, the only reason the show's producers even think to do this is because of a Periphery Demographic in America, who presumably appreciates the show for what it is, quirky foreignness and all.
  • One of the cast members gets into an embarrassing real-life scandal. This makes the show less interesting than the scandal. If the accusation is really serious (e.g. racism, Domestic Abuse, sexual assault), no one will want anything to do with the show until that cast member is erased from the show entirely — which can't always be done cleanly.
  • Change of timeslot. This is especially true if the show winds up on the other side of the Watershed and now has to worry about censorship (or lack thereof, if it's been moved to Otaku O'Clock). A Channel Hop can also cause a serious shift, especially if the new network has a smaller audience, or if it doesn't fit the new network's genre (leading to Network Decay). A move to the Friday Night Death Slot is almost certainly the show's death knell.
  • The original creator is no longer in charge anymore. They may have left to work on other projects, they may have been fired or Kicked Upstairs, they may have died, or they may have just stopped caring. Whatever the case, the creator can no longer micromanage his creation, and whoever is newly in charge will be keen to remake the show in their own vision. This, of course, presumes that the creator hasn't tried to sabotage it before leaving.
  • A main cast member becomes a producer. This allows them to think of the show as "their show" and take total control of it. Their co-stars are often resentful of this, and it shows on screen.
  • A real-life Hollywood couple is cast as the lead couple and puts too much of themselves into the characters they play.
  • An important role is given to a relative or significant other of some key player behind the scenes, regardless of that person's competence or fitness for the role.
  • The departure of the last remaining original cast member. While cast members leaving and being replaced often leads to a shark-jumping, this can be avoided if it's the right kind of show. But when this particular cast member leaves, there's no denying it's the End of an Era.
  • The show gives in to outside pressure to change the material, either to make it Darker and Edgier (because people want to be fans of a "deep" show) or to tone it down at the behest of the Moral Guardians, whose demands tend to be even less reasonable (and aren't even based on research).
  • The show becomes too successful and can now sell by itself, which can lead to a collapse in motivation or effort from the creators, or the creators getting Protection from Editors and ignoring advice on improving the show from outside.
  • The show has multiple creators with different creative visions, who start fighting over whose canon is better while forgetting to make stories worth watching.
  • A Promoted Fanboy gains control and the show becomes susceptible to personal over-indulgences in Mythology Gags, Internal Homages, Shout Outs, Actor Allusions, Fan Wank, and other love letters to the show.
  • A writer's strike hits. Replacement writers are by definition scabs and can rarely come up with something that can measure up to the regulars' work. This also leads to things like excessive Bottle Episodes in a desperate attempt to wait out the strike.
  • Technology Marches On in a way that fundamentally changes production while a show tries to continue in the new format as though nothing ever happened. A generation of TV shows had their best years in black and white, switched to color, and often continued right up to The Rural Purge, but the most memorable and best-received era is the black-and-white era.

Contrast Growing the Beard, when a show gets better over time. For a related phenomenon, see Franchise Original Sin. When it's whole networks instead of just shows, see Network Decay; for print magazines, see Magazine Decay. When a work gets its act together and regains its fandom even after such an event, see Win Back the Crowd and Sophomore Slump.

When the people start claiming something's a shark-jumping moment immediately after it happens, see Ruined FOREVER.

Has nothing to do with the Discovery Channel's Shark Week Air Jaws specials, or tales of people actually riding them.

No Real Life Examples, Please! This is one of the most subjective articles on the site, and it's likely to start arguments. In any event, almost any show that's at least three seasons long will have enough variations in quality that you can point to some moment as "jumping the shark". This page only lists overt references to the term or lampshades of the phenomenon. Most will not be kind.


In-Universe Examples Only (which allows references to the term):

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    Comic Books

  • Knights of the Dinner Table #151 is titled "Jump the Shark". It features Gary Jackson coming Back from the Dead. It's actually one of several suggestions floated by the writers in the joke section on the back page for how the comic could jump the shark — several issues previously. And apparently, the writers were planning to do this even before that list, making this a case of Self-Deprecation.
  • Ultimate Spider-Man issue 67 is titled "Jump the Shark", as it's the second half of the Body Swap storyline between Spidey and Wolverine, a two-part Breather Episode following the very bleak Carnage story. To boot, both issues opened with a mini-comic of Brian Michael Bendis apologizing to the reader and engaging in a lot of Self-Deprecation.

    Bendis: Even I couldn't milk three issues out of this...

  • In Spider-Verse, Miles Morales believes his life has reached this moment as he's being chased by the police while riding in a sentient Spider-Mobile. Animated Ultimate Peter suggests it was earlier, back in the cowboy Spider-Man's world.
  • A particularly oddball issue of Transformers: More than Meets the Eye features a bar named "The Jumping Shark" as a Funny Background Event.

    Fan Works

  • In Light and Dark The Adventures of Dark Yagami, this is referenced and lampshaded during a boat chase:

    "They did a bunch of jumps over a wall and a cruise boat but missed some sharks and didn't jump them (ITS AN INTERNET THINGY)."

  • In Jake English's Mysterious Theater of Scientific Romance from the Year 3000, season 3 ends with everyone gathering around to watch Cronus jump a shark. He fails.
  • In the short House fanfic titled, well, "Shark", House wakes up in bed with Cameron, Cuddy, and Wilson. They quickly realize that they've fulfilled just about every shipping combination, and start to worry if they still have an audience.

    "Maybe we can string this out...but let's face facts. We've not only jumped, but boned the shark."

    Film

  • In Sharknado 2: The Second One, Fin runs across the backs of several sharks to reach his friends. Martin jokes, "Talk about jumping the shark!"
  • The creation of Indominus rex in Jurassic World is fueled by the executive's desire to attract new visitors, and counteract the Park's lower entry rate. This is lampshaded by one park-goer:

    "Jurassic Park didn't need Indominus rex!"

  • The Fate of the Furious: Vin Diesel's character jumping a car over an Akula note Russian for "shark"-class submarine in a self-depreciating Easter Egg.
  • Referenced near the end of Game Night. After the protagonists have spent most of the night dealing with a murder mystery game being hijacked by a real kidnapping, it turns out that was just another ruse set up by Max and Annie's neighbour. When another set of criminals shows up, Max assumes it's a last-ditch twist and declares that the whole thing's jumped the shark. Unfortunately, these bad guys are very real.

    Literature

  • Where Are They Now Mysteries: Discussed by name in the first book, which focuses on Tilda Harper searching for an actress from the long-ended sitcom Kissing Cousins (about a trio of "normal" siblings and their cousins, a trio of equally "weird" siblings, coming to live with their grandfather and getting into typical sitcom shenanigans), and includes episode summaries, excerpts from interviews with cast and crew, and other reviews of the show. It's noted in narration that another set of cousins (seven-year-old twins, one "normal" and one "weird") were added to try and counter falling ratings in the last season, but it failed miserably; fans considered their arrival to be when the show jumped the shark. (The actresses themselves don't seem to realize how disliked they were.)

    Live-Action TV

  • In the Arrested Development episode "Motherboy XXX", Barry Zuckercorn — played by Henry Winkler, Fonzie himself — visits Buster on a dock, where his hand has been eaten by a seal. On his way to make a Product Placement for Burger King, he is forced to physically jump over the shark.
  • In the self-referential 200th episode of Stargate SG-1, Marty responds to the suggestion of doing the Wormhole X-Treme! movie with Thunderbirds-style puppets by sarcastically suggesting that they have Puppet O'Neill jump over a puppet shark on a scale motorcycle.
  • 30 Rock: in the episode "The One With the Cast of Night Court", Jenna Maroney is blamed by Harry Anderson, Markie Post, and Charles Robinson for making Night Court "jump the shark" for her three-part episode as werewolf lawyer Sparky Monroe.

    Harry: You made us jump the shark! You're the reason we didn't have a tenth season!
    Markie: I had just bought my second home when they brought that idiot werewolf lawyer in!
    Jenna: (insulted) Uh, that "idiot werewolf" paid for my hand reduction surgery, okay?

  • The fifth-season premiere of Reno 911!, entitled "Jumping the Shark", featured Lt. Dangle attempting to jump over a normal fish tank containing a small shark. Naturally, he doesn't quite make it over, and Hilarity Ensues. Incidentally, it was the first new episode to be aired after the release of The Movie.
  • An episode of That '70s Show has Fez, imagining how cool it would be to be Fonzie, having a daydream of himself performing the original jump. Hyde comments that this was the worst moment in television history, and Fez confesses that he stopped watching the show after that. It's interesting, because this is more of a modern perspective rather than one commonly held at the time it aired... like pretty much everything on That '70s Show.
  • In the last episode of Boston Legal after Alan accepts Denny's proposal of marriage, Denny says, "It'll be great! Like jumping a shark!"
  • Supernatural:
    • An episode named "Jumping the Shark" features a kid believed to be the third Winchester brother. It includes a poster advertising "Fonzarelli's Water Skiing Event", and the diner where they meet the kid is called "Cousin Oliver's". In the end, he really is their brother but is already dead, and he stays dead.
    • Referenced again at the end of the episode "The Real Ghostbusters":
  • One episode of House has House, bored out of his skull during clinic duty, constructing a racetrack from medical tape, tongue depressors, and cards. At the end of the track is a ramp, and under the ramp is a shark. Cuddy catches the car in midair before it reaches the shark. Whew...
  • An episode in The X-Files titled "Jump the Shark" sees the Lone Gunmen — the quirky trio of conspiracy theorists that had lasted the show's entire run and gotten their own failed spinoff — thwarting a terrorist's plot to use a neurotoxin made from sharks (somehow). Unfortunately, they died in the process.
  • Ned's Declassified School Survival Guide has an episode about making and taking dares that incorporates one character jumping a bicycle over a tank with a shark in it.
  • In the (somewhat rushed) finale of Pushing Daisies, the Victim of the Week is killed by accidentally leaping into the mouth of a shark.
  • Web Soup host Chris Hardwick used this phrase when a video in their "Things You Can't Un-See" segment was legitimately disgusting and nauseating. (It was a gaping foot wound crawling with live maggots.)
  • Community Season Finale: Troy wants to move in with Abed, but Genre Savvy Abed says their friendship would jump the shark if they did. Troy responds that when Fonzie literally jumped the shark, it was the best episode ever.
  • Attack of the Show! did a parody of Discovery Channel's Shark Week with their own "Jump the Shark Week", where each day they would jump the shark in classic fashion. Methods included being attacked by a cougar à la 24, having a Dallas-style murder mystery, having a Cousin Oliver show up, and having an Evil Twin à la Knight Rider.
  • Wipeout couldn't resist mentioning the trope; an episode featured an elimination game called "Jump the Shark", where players had to, well, jump over a spinning shark.
  • In the Angel episode "Smile Time", the owner of the eponymous puppet show makes a deal with demons to keep his show on the air when it starts losing ratings. Unfortunately, he neglected to Read the Fine Print. While the term "jump the shark" is never actually used, Gunn's research reveals that the demons have tried this before:

    Gunn: You see the last few seasons of Happy Days?

  • CSI:
    • The episode "Two and a Half Deaths" features a scene where Brass mentions the term "jumping the shark" to Grissom. Unfamiliar with what this means, Grissom asks and Brass is about to explain what it means when a scream switches the focus onto something else.
    • In the show's final episode, Grissom is clearly aware of it, as he holds up two severed shark fins to a bunch of cops and says, "Looks like someone jumped a shark."
  • In the last series of Made in Canada, the trope is discussed by the main characters in the episode "Beaver Creek Jumps the Shark", both regarding their own lives and the Show Within a Show Beaver Creek. They differ on when exactly the series jumped the shark, but several of the usual candidates are mentioned — a Cousin Oliver (actually named Oliver), supernatural elements, Shipping Bed Death, a Musical Episode, a live episode, a Real Time episode, and a guest appearance by Ted McGinley. As for their lives, they all seem to have begun their downward slides courtesy of some moment involving their Pointy-Haired Boss Alan Roy.
  • Two Pints of Lager and a Packet of Crisps once had lead character Johnny attempt (off-screen) to exactly emulate Fonzie's stunt. Given that he died in the attempt and it was a live episode, the producers were no doubt lampshading these facts. At one point Janet even does a Fonzie impression. The title of this "very special episode" is "When Johnny Met Sharky".
  • The penultimate episode of The Colbert Report literally did it in the opening credits.
  • In the season four premiere of Wizards of Waverly Place, Alex lies to the reporters that Lady Gaga was going to jump over a shark tank while riding on a motorcycle.
  • The Grand Tour episode "A Massive Hunt" has Richard and Jeremy discuss how swimming is forbidden in Réunion because of shark attacks:

    Richard: It's only shallow. If a shark comes, we can jump it.

    Jeremy: I think we did that in 2013.

    Music

  • "Weird Al" Yankovic's song "Couch Potato" contains the line:
  • Fun. has an unreleased song called "Jumping the Shark" that applies the concept to Nate Ruess' own life.

    Professional Wrestling

  • WWE:
    • Lampshaded by JBL and Michael Cole on the 9/27/13 edition of WWE SmackDown, when Jinder Mahal and The Great Khali use flutes to charm Santino Marella's Cobra in the middle of a match with Heath Slater.
    • Lampshaded again by Edge during an episode of The Cutting Edge in 2010, in the midst of his feud with the Anonymous RAW General Manager. As he put it, they went from "Stone Cold" Steve Austin stunning Vince McMahon to Edge arguing with a computer. This eventually led to Edge going on a crusade against everything stupid in the WWE.

    Tabletop Games

  • Maid RPG specifically lampshades this for one of its example games, which due to player twinkery went completely and irretrievably Off the Rails (which, of course, never happens in real sessions). After Yugami, Kamiya, and Hizumi manage to derail the game into something resembling Fist of the North Star:

    Hizumi: See this? This is a shark. And here I am jumping over it. I'm jumping over a shark here. Shark? Jumping. Over.

    Video Games

  • Kingdom of Loathing:
    • A certain item, equipped in the torso slot, drops from a shark. As usual, the item description contains several "examples of what plot elements may cause or be symptomatic of jumping the shark."
    • One of the skills in the Avatar of Sneaky Pete special challenge path is "Jump the Shark", which gives you extra experience points but causes Sneaky Pete's "studio audience" to hate him (which can actually be useful to some of his skills).
  • In Tony Hawk's American Wasteland, one of the missions involves feeding imbecilic oil rig worker Mega's pet shark, Fonzie. That involves jumping over him on your board for some reason. Keep in mind that Mega's the kind of guy to name a shark Fonzie unironically, completely unaware of it meaning anything deeper than "That guy on that show I watched when I was like five. He was cool. Ayyyyy!"
  • In Hallrunner , a game on the Videlectrix website (hosted by the creators of Homestar Runner), the object of the game is to make your way through various obstacles while running down a never-ending hallway. Upon coming to each obstacle, the player has the option of talking to it, fighting it, or jumping it. If the player chooses "jump" when the obstacle is a shark, he gets the response "You jump the shark. Just like homestarrunner.com."
  • In Skate 3, the player attempts to jump over a statue of a shark in the opening cinematic. He fails, which is a setup for you to use plastic surgery to create your character. You can jump it in the actual game.
  • Jumpman Zero has a level called "Jump the Shark", which is basically a big underwater room with a shark in it.
  • Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance has a trophy titled "Jumping the Shark", which you can get for destroying ten Hammerhead enemies in the game.
  • World of Warcraft has a daily quest in Krasarang Wilds called "Jumping the Shark", in which your character, with his or her bare hands, jumps on a shark and beats the daylights out of it. This is far from the most outlandish thing most characters have done by this point.
  • Far Cry 3: Blood Dragon features a scene where Rex launches a car over a shark... well, a Sharktopus, to be more exact. HUD even describes the objective as simply "Jump the Shark".
  • In Saints Row IV, the final mission is called "Punch the Shark", even though no actual sharks are involved. "Jumping" it just doesn't quite cut it anymore.
  • BlazBlue Continuum Shift Extend has Ragna say that Valkenhayn is jumping the shark when he prepares for his Uber-Verboten Attack in his joke end.
  • As a self-deprecating joke, a TV show literally called "Jump The Shark" figures into the plot of the Deadpool video game. Apparently, it consists entirely of Fonzie-expy contestants jumping over a shark tank with a motorbike.
  • In the intro for Mega Man's Christmas Carol 3, Proto Man has gotten fed up with Christmases that go sour and the doctors acting bizarrely, with this game's Paper-Thin Disguise scenario leading him to outright call it shark-jumping territory. Seeing as this game was released after a lengthy delay, it's definitely intentional.

    Webcomics

  • Lampshade Hanging on it in this strip of Dan and Mab's Furry Adventures.
  • In Bitmap World , the phrase is used to indicate its very silly and literal meaning. The creators insist that this does not mean their relatively new strip (at the time of publication) is headed in that direction.
  • In Bruno the Bandit, the protagonist literally has to jump a shark, to be more successful getting readers.
  • In Calamities of Nature, a direct reference to Happy Days is made when jumping the shark.
  • Schlock Mercenary uses a gag about a shark tank and a motorcycle ramp as a promise that even though the strip's invoking Time Travel as a Reset Button, it's just this once and that's not what it's going to be all about from now on.
  • The 542nd strip of The Order of the Stick is named "In Azure City, Shark Jumps You!", which is also an actual description of the strip's contents.
  • Melonpool, after a decade of time-travel history-changing shenanigans, had gotten so convoluted that the author decided on a massive retcon, whose fuzzy science rationale actually had the acronym Jump the S.H.A.R.K..
  • Irregular Webcomic! addressed Jumping the Shark (both literally and figuratively) in an arc starting here.
  • Clip-art web comic Partially Clips lampshades its own potential shark-jumping here.
  • A Freefall strip features a shark tank, but warns people away from jumping over it.
  • In Absurd Notions, several years in, the characters buy an aquarium and get a pet Bala shark. They decide that, given that they introduced the shark as a new character to breathe new life into their boring lives, the only honest name to give the shark was "Jump".
  • This and the Cousin Oliver trope gets referenced in this Something*Positive strip where the writers for Monette's show discuss future plots.
  • Gordito in The Adventures of Dr. McNinja literally jumped over a winged, flying shark. The alt-text defended the move with "Look, it was the only way he could dodge it". Of course, by Dr. McNinja standards this isn't that unusual an event.
  • Heywood in Mynarski Forest replicated the Fonz's jump, in the strip's background, in mocking recognition that the comic had just had two stories in a row turn out to be All Just a Dream.
  • xkcd has this comic's Alt Text:

    Alt-text: Dinosaurs totally jumped the ichthyosaur when they got rid of the brontosaurus.

  • Bob the Angry Flower ramps a shark on a motorcycle. Into space.
  • In Unwinder's Tall Comics, Unwinder laments the decline of his former favorite webcomic:

    Unwinder: Nutflix? Oh goll, Mildred, that comic basically jumped the whale shark. THE LARGEST SHARK ON EARTH.

  • Inverted, but taken literally in Sandra and Woo.
  • In the end-of-chapter commentary strips by two minor characters of Errant Story, one of them carries a pair of water skis and announces she'll try to jump a great white, prompting the other to note that the writer just did that. The immediate followup was an amusing subversion, too.
  • Commissioned officially announced it jumped the zombie on November 18th, 2009.
  • Mentioned by name in Questionable Content, when Faye finally stops being even the least bit curious about Pintsize's antics.
  • PvP combined it with Breaking the Fourth Wall in this strip and also used it here.
  • Bug Martini: Signs Your Life has Jumped the Shark.
  • Ansem Retort had this to say, after Jesus turned Marluxia into a gay dragon:

    Hades: And Alexander wept, for there were no more sharks to jump.

  • Robbie and Bobby makes a reference in a short storyline where Robbie and Stephen Hawking switch brains.
  • Persona 3 FTW had a comic where the leads lament having to switch to the summer uniforms, followed by Fonzie jumping the shark. JC confirmed that he doesn't like the summer uniforms. Still doesn't.

    Web Original

  • The Zero Punctuation review for LEGO Indiana Jones was the first to feature a new opening video and hardcore metal theme song, as opposed to the (copyrighted) music of previous shorts. In his sign-off bit of snark, Yahtzee predicts oodles of e-mails predicting this as "his shark-jumping moment".
  • Episode 15 of Yu-Gi-Oh! The Abridged Series had this exchange at the end:
  • As the entire thing is a Shout-Out to Happy Days, this Oxhorn WoW Machinima has a character literally jump a shark... and shoot it in the same motion.
  • The Nostalgia Critic refers to it on occasion:
    • In the Rocky IV review, a completely ridiculous robot that drives in is introduced as the Shark-Jumper 5000. It appears again in the introduction of Game Boy in the commentary for the Captain N: The Game Master review.
    • Mentioned twice in the Independence Day review, although he didn't think the movie was good in the first place, so he was likely confusing the term for something else.
    • Mentioned with a whole rant about how much the shark is abused in the review of The Neverending Story III when the Rock Biter rides a bike singing "Born to be Wild". Although since he made it clear the series went downhill with the second movie, this again was misusing the term. Then again, there is no accurate fan speak term for that moment popular enough for him to rant that way about it, so it slides by with Rule of Funny.
  • Shark Jumping is dedicated to reviewing TV shows (such as How I Met Your Mother, Glee, or The Fairly OddParents) and occasionally even movies, trying to pinpoint the exact moment they jumped the shark.
  • In one episode of Bonus Stage, Joel exclaims, "Come quick! We're about to travel over Shark World! I don't know why we haven't done this already." In another episode, Joel states that there are "some sharks [he] refuses to jump".
  • The title card at the end of the first episode of Madd Man reads, "MISSION ACCOMPLISHED: Jumped the Shark on the First Episode".
  • Two Best Friends Play: After making two episodes independently, they were picked up by the Machinima Youtube channel. They referenced this "selling out" in their next video, Donkey Kong Country Returns, by having Kong physically jump over a shark enemy.

    Matt: Jump the shark! Jump the shark!
    Pat: I don't wanna jump the shark! ...Aw, we jumped it.

  • This post in the fan-made Just a Useless Bunny Touhou Ask Blog parodies the common changes done by Executive Meddling that often lead to this, complete with a final panel of Reisen water skiing over a shark.
  • From RedLetterMedia:
  • In Dragon Ball Z Abridged's "Episode of Bardock", it takes Bardock a long time to realise that he's gone into the past, and once he does:

    Bardock: Of all the stupid! (headdesks the ground) Asinine! (punches the ground) Shark-jumping bullshit! (headdesks again, goes Super Saiyan)

  • CollegeHumor:
    • Parodied in one of the Next Time On Bear Shark segments in which the shark jumps a pen full of Fonzies while on water skis. The sequence doesn't actually appear in the next episode at all.
    • Another sketch took the concept Up to Eleven in "Jump the Shark": A new Spin-Off, Tony Hawk appears as a guest star, two characters get engaged, they move to a new building, Amir gets replaced, and Jeff gives birth to a baby Supreme Court justice. Finally, the whole cast gets replaced at the very end with a younger cast.
  • In DEATH BATTLE!, when Wiz describes the Flightpack from Robocop 3 as part of their analysis on "Robocop vs Terminator", he mentions that it "helps (Robocop) jump sharks".
  • Rooster Teeth has a T-shirt that has the phrase "YOLO" jumping a tub with a shark on it.
  • Red vs. Blue, has a PSA on how to prolong a Long Runner series (the show had passed 17 seasons by then) where Sarge decides to do "a dangerous stunt, where one of us has to jump over a tank of dangerous marine life", with Simmons pointing out it's better not to jump the shark, literally or figuratively.
  • The Game Theory episode "Why I Gave the Pope Undertale" starts off with MatPat saying that despite the backlash the episode "The Truth about Sans" got, he still liked it, prompting this exchange:

    The Pope: That's the one where Game Theory jumped the shark.
    MatPat: No it isn't! (Beat) No it isn't!

  • Apparently, jumping the shark is one of the most important duties for employees of the Shark Punching Center.

    Western Animation

  • Becomes a Visual Pun in the 100th episode of My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic: Vinyl Scratch and Octavia Melody are riding on a giant DJ platform on wheels to make it to Matilda's wedding in time. As they fly down the road, the station jumps over a plush shark doll for a split second.
  • In the 101 Dalmatian Street episode "Dal-Martians", Dolly is telling a Story about how she, Dylan, and Dawkins were able to launch a UFO-shaped parade float in to the canal. When the float launches up a ramp, it shows them flying over a shark.
  • In the Sealab 2021 episode "Sharko's Machine", Sharko, a Cousin Oliver parody who is Marco's half-shark illegitimate son, is seen jumping over several Fonzies during an absurd Hard-Work Montage.
  • Foster's Home for Imaginary Friends:
    • In "Sweet Stench of Success", Bloo becomes an advertising icon who gets his own sitcom spinoff. The preview after the very first episode is, "Tune in next week when Deo jumps a shark!"
    • In the final episode, "Goodbye to Bloo", Bloo thinks Mac is moving away forever and tries to come up with something big they can do for their last day together. After Mac shoots down several of his suggestions as things they have already done before (all of them references to the plots of previous episodes), Bloo decides that the only thing left to do is to Jump the Shark. Unable to find a shark in time, he settles for walking over a fishbowl containing a fish with a paper fin.
  • Kim Possible: The title character addresses her thoughts on jumping the shark, by hanging up on Ron when he brings it up. It's in reference to them finally becoming the Official Couple, which they may be aware could end the show. This Fanfiction takes the idea a bit further, parodying Happy Days and then revealing it was All Just a Dream.
  • One episode of Squidbillies shows Rusty watching a TV show in which a mailman delivers mail very dramatically. Early comments that it had jumped the shark already.
  • In an episode of What's New, Scooby-Doo? where the gang goes to the set of an action film, the director ends up modifying the script to have Scooby and Shaggy launch on a motorcycle over a tank of sharks. Velma remarks, "Never thought I'd see Scooby-Doo jump the shark."
  • One "Previously On" for a two-part episode of South Park had scenes of Fonzie about to jump a shark cut in. Then when he makes the jump, he gets eaten, seeming to say "Not yet, viewers".
  • In My Life as a Teenage Robot's final episode "In-Des-Tuck-Able", Tuck is performing a series of dangerous stunts, including riding a motorcycle over a Shark Pool. Brad provides the lampshading:

    Brad: Once you jump the shark, the show is over.

  • This is referenced in an episode of The Amazing World of Gumball. In "The Test", where the universe becomes a sitcom starring Tobias, the show reaches critical mass with lazy cliches, until it ends on an All Just a Dream twist. It turns out that Tobias had gotten injured jumping a shark. The sitcom is ended for real when Tobias is liberated of his face by Gumball's repressed venom.
  • The Simpsons is a Long Runner with some serious self-awarenes:
    • One episode shows the characters running out of plots because they're either doing things that they've already done (e.g. Bart buys a race horse but Lisa had already done that) or noticing things they should already know (e.g. Marge's gambling problem). Then comes an improbable twist where the horse jockeys turn out to be elves in disguise, complete with schlocky musical number. Comic Book Guy throws a lampshade on it by wearing a "Worst Episode Ever" shirt.
    • One Couch Gag has the family jump a shark to land on the couch, only for Homer to lose both legs.
    • One of the Clip Show episodes features a song lampshading both clip shows and the sort of absurd plots that normally constitute a shark jump, complete with a still image of Homer on waterskis. It's also a meta reference to Matt Groening's claim that you'll The Simpsons has jumped the shark when they introduce something like the Great Gazoo.

      Troy McClure: That's it for our spinoff showcase. But what about the show that started it all? How do you keep The Simpsons fresh and funny after eight long years? Well, here's what's on tap for season nine: Magic powers! Wedding after wedding after wedding. And did someone say "long-lost triplets"? So join America's favorite TV family, and a tiny green space alien named Ozmodiar that only Homer can see, on FOX this fall. It'll be out of this world! Right, Ozmodiar?
      Ozmodiar: Damn straight, Troy my man!

    • "They'll Never Stop 'The Simpsons'" (which was part of a Clip Show) features an image of Homer jumping over a shark (about 28 seconds in), just before launching into a series of stupid ideas that the show could pursue in the future. Two of them (Marge as a robot, and Abe marrying Selma and not Patty) actually happened in later seasons.
  • During the Teen Titans (2003) episode where the Titans chase Control Freak into TV land, Robin finds himself on some kind of action challenge show being forced by a suspiciously familiar-looking host with a funny accent to waterski off a ramp, at which point a shark leaps out of the water underneath him.
  • In The Replacements, Dick Daring jumps the shark twice in the second episode of the first season, with a Fonz lookalike appearing both times.
  • The Fairly Oddparents:
    • A Cut Song from The Movie, "Channel Chasers", had Timmy jumping a shark with a guy who looked a lot like the Fonz.
    • The episode that introduces Wanda's twin sister Blonda has a side plot consisting of Timmy doing various "EXTREEEME!!" stunts. The very first stunt was him rocketskating over a shark tank.
  • Fanboy and Chum Chum referenced jumping the shark during the episode "Total Recall": One of the shows they liked had the title character, an octopus spy named Agent 8 jump a shark. They found the show got better after.
  • Dante and Randal in the Clerks: The Animated Series reminisce about the iconic scene from Happy Days, except in their recollection, the shark came back and ate Samuel L. Jackson.
  • In The Venture Bros., the Monarch references this trope regarding henchmen:

    Monarch: You say "jump", they say "what shark?"

  • The series finale of Batman: The Brave and the Bold is all about this trope. Bat-Mite, tired of the show's Lighter and Softer nature, conspires to get it cancelled in the hopes that it'll be replaced by a Darker and Edgier Batman show. He does this by using his Reality Warper powers to inflict several classic shark jumps on the show, including giving Batman a love interest and sickeningly cute daughter, inserting obvious toy tie-ins, changing Aquaman's voice actor (to Ted McGinley, no less), giving Ace the Bat-Hound a very familiar nephew, moving the show to Malibu, and finally making Batman use guns. Ambush Bug (voiced by Henry Winkler himself) tries to save the day by telling Batman that they're in a TV show and if they don't get back to normal fast, declining viewership will destroy their world. They're too late to save the show, but at least they manage to salvage its dignity. As for Bat-Mite, not only does he not get what he wanted (the replacement is a CG-animated show about Batgirl), but Ambush Bug points out that since he's part of Brave and the Bold, the cancellation affects him too, and a silly character like him would never be included in a Darker and Edgier Batman show. Bat-Mite vanishes into thin air, while the other characters have a party and Batman thanks his viewers for their support.
  • Big City Greens: The episode "Animation Abomination" has this occur in-universe with Cricket's version of the ending to the season finale of Kingdom of Lore, where the heroine suddenly turns evil and makes everything explode, thus foregoing all previously established storylines and suddenly changing the status quo without warning.
  • Team Umizoomi has an unusual variation where a shark jumps with the Team.
  • Mentioned in the Regular Show episode "The Heart of a Stuntman".
  • The Transformers: Rescue Bots episode "Movers and Shakers" features Blades, while dealing with the rogue robot that was the episode's problem, jumping over a statue of a shark and even saying the Fonz's catchphrase.

The Trope Namer Explained

MatPat educates viewers on the trope namer for Jumping the Shark, Happy Days.

Alternative Title(s): Jump The Shark, Jumped The Shark, Shark Jump, Jumps The Shark

hazeltinesplight.blogspot.com

Source: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/JumpingTheShark

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