Difference between revisions of "List of phrases Chris copied from media"

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*Source: [[Mailbag 51]]
*Source: [[Mailbag 51]]
*Origin: The Cleveland Show: "Love Rollercoaster" - A joke in which Cleveland is Steve Jobs and invents the edible cellphone, the iRitz.   
*Origin: The Cleveland Show: "Love Rollercoaster" - A joke in which Cleveland is Steve Jobs and invents the edible cellphone, the iRitz.   
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;George Washington Carver finding over 300 uses for peanuts (but not peanut butter)
<blockquote>
*Source: [[Mailbag 53]]
*Origin: American Dad: "Black Mystery Month" - The episode centered around an attempt to disprove George Washington Carver as the inventor of peanut butter, and this quote ends the episode. It is likely from context this is his only experience with Black History Month
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</blockquote>



Revision as of 04:49, 20 July 2010

It is no secret that Chris spends a healthy portion of his day watching Television shows. His preferences become apparent not only because he will constantly force you to listen to him talk about them, but also because Chris, in his infinite originality, likes to take phrases and sentences from shows and use them word by word in his everyday speech. This article attempts to list all of these occurrences, especially those he has used repeatedly.

Family Guy, The Cleveland Show or American Dad

Blocky low resolution
  • Source: When referring to Asperchu's inferiority, e.g. Mailbag 41, 42, 43 and 45
  • Origin: Family guy's "Road to the Multiverse" episode

Grinds my gears
  • Source: The Cwcipedia page on homosexuality, Mailbag 2
  • Origin: Family Guy's "Stewie Griffin: The Untold Story" episode: Peter gets his own segment, "You Know What Really Grinds My Gears?", talking about things that annoy him, or "grind [his] gears"
iRitz
  • Source: Mailbag 51
  • Origin: The Cleveland Show: "Love Rollercoaster" - A joke in which Cleveland is Steve Jobs and invents the edible cellphone, the iRitz.
George Washington Carver finding over 300 uses for peanuts (but not peanut butter)
  • Source: Mailbag 53
  • Origin: American Dad: "Black Mystery Month" - The episode centered around an attempt to disprove George Washington Carver as the inventor of peanut butter, and this quote ends the episode. It is likely from context this is his only experience with Black History Month

Rocko's Modern life

Bad luck and extreme misfortune
  • Source: Describing the effects of the Curse-ye-ha-me-ha
  • Origin: "Fortune Cookie": Filburt's fortune cookie reads "Bad luck and extreme misfortune will infest your pathetic soul for all eternity"

Dragonball

Kamehameha

Excel Saga

I'm much saltier now
  • Source: Chris likes to say this to say that he's less naive about sex than he was in high school thanks to porn.
  • Origin: Something Excel says to comment on her training. In particular, she's responding to someone describing her as "sweet", which is the only way the sentence sounds even remotely appropriate.

South Park

Breakin' my balls
  • Source: Said about something that gives him a lot of stress.
  • Origin: "Kenny Dies": Cartman tries to start a business selling aborted fetuses to stem cell research laboratories. When making deals over the phone, he says "Ugh, you're breakin' my balls man. Got 'em in a vice grip, here."
Shove your ass down your throat and make you eat your underwear
  • Source: Threatened Clyde Cash with this line in this video.
  • Origin: "The Breast Cancer Show Ever": Wendy challenges Cartman to a fight after the latter makes an extremely tasteless breast cancer joke. Cartman, not wanting to fight, tries to talk her out of it, but refuses to apologize for the joke publicly, prompting Wendy to threaten him with this line.

Transformers

One shall stand, one shall fall.
  • Source: Used in a speech he gave to Clyde Cash during the infamous IRC chat, where Chris proclaimed he had several pairs of DIRTY, CRAPPED BRIEFS.
  • Origin: Optimus Prime has said this phrase several times to Megatron in the television series, as well as the Transformers movie from 2007.

Star Trek

Captain's Log, Stardate.
  • Source: The introduction to most of his videos.
  • Origin: The typical intro to an episode of the television series and any entry to the film series.