Laugh Out Cloud Trolls Branch Harvest Baby Tears

https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/trolls_the_beat_goes_on_poster.png

Celebrating who nosotros are
Yes, nosotros fabricated it through the night
Harmony is everywhere
Put your hair upwards in the air!
—>— The show's theme song

Trolls: The Beat Goes On! is a Netflix animated series produced by DreamWorks Animation, based on their 2016 moving picture Trolls.

The show takes place after the film (and Trolls Vacation) and follows the Denser and Wackier, Slice of Life adventures of Queen Poppy, her boyfriend Branch, the Snack Pack, Bridget, Male monarch Gristle, and their fellow trolls and Bergens as they keep the music going in brand-new adventures.

The series premiered on Netflix on January nineteen, 2018, with six episodes making up the first flavor. Seven more than episodes, comprising the second season, premiered on March 9. Subsequently 52 episodes, the evidence'due south final season aired November 22, 2019, in time for the motion-picture show sequel Trolls: World Bout. There have been ii web series of promotional shorts for the serial titled ASK POPPY and Trolls: Pump Up the Party!.

A second Trolls series taking place later on the events of the second film, exclusive to Hulu and Peacock, followed in November 19, 2020, titled Trolls: TrollsTopia.

The serial subsequently showed up in Universal Kids, which historic its inclusion with a four-day marathon through the 2020 Thanksgiving weekend.


Trolls: The Crush Goes On! provides examples of:

    open/close all folders

    #-Due east

  • Culling Foreign Theme Vocal:
    • The Korean dub uses a dissimilar version of "Hair In The Air" that is sung at a lower octave and adds several rap verses.
    • Both the Korean and Japanese dubs apply "Best 24-hour interval E'er" from "The Majestic Review" as the catastrophe theme.
  • Ambiguous Ending: The testify'due south last episode revolves around Co-operative deciding to motion out of his bunker, then deciding that it'due south too big a step too presently...but so the cocky-destruct button goes off. This may have been to prevent continuity errors with Trolls World Tour.
  • Ambiguous Situation: The series dances around the verbal nature of Poppy and Branch'southward relationship. The movie more or less treats them as the Official Couple. The serial overall treats them every bit close friends. However, they are transport teased every now and then. Whether or not this is just troll courtship is unknown. And so comes the sequel pic, approaching their human relationship even more than by addressing their feelings for each other.
  • An Aesop: To name a few:
    • "A New Bergen-ing": Friends are friends, regardless of how different they can be.
    • "Fun Branch": Have fun your ain style.
    • "Funishment": Remember to inquire permission next fourth dimension before borrowing.
    • "Prank Day": Pranking someone is a big threat to another.
    • "The Poppy Horror Picture Bear witness": Be brave, particularly if a scary story is existent.
  • Apology Gift: Cooper gives the Bergen the pie he stole in episode 3.
  • April Fools' Plot: "Prank 24-hour interval", involving Poppy and Branch in a pranking competition to earn the championship of "Prank Chief".
  • Capricious Skepticism: Occurs no matter how odd their world is with but one lampshade hanging. In Whimsy Wasps Smidge points out the biological impossibility of both a species that feeds on whimsy and 1 that feeds on boringness. Both times she's countered by Cooper pooping cupcakes on the spot, which she concedes to. Another episode has Branch point out the evolutionary nonsense of a establish on a remote isle that swallows trolls whole to spit them out with a makeover, nevertheless the plot of another episode was nigh them hunting for swag by tickling a species of deer until they puked it up. Not to mention all the patently natural instances of Organic Engineering the trolls utilize like giant beetles that are turntable audio systems or the small bug-like critters they use as boomboxes.
  • Fine art Shift: The scrapbook sequences, which are notwithstanding in its inclement animation.
  • Art-Shifted Sequel
  • Ascended Extra: The Snack Pack. Being a television receiver serial, each is given more screen time, and some of them take gotten a chance to polish. Well, non Fuzzbert...
    • It looked like Fuzzbert was near to polish in "Freeze Tag", with Poppy preparing to tell the kids a story almost him, until Smidge cuts her off to focus on the bodily plot.
  • Ask a Stupid Question...:

    Bergen: Did your mama teach you to be lame, or were you born that way?

  • Audience Surrogate: Due to being a grumpy shut-in nigh of his life, Poppy normally has to explain the current holiday or festivity to Branch and the audience.
    • Lampshaded in "Funsgiving" with the Snack Pack explaining the holiday to Branch, even though he already knows well-nigh it. Then they start explaining food to him.
  • Babysitting Episode: Petsitting to be improve said, merely this is the plot of "Adventures in Dinkles-Sitting".
  • Bad Hair Day:
    • The Inquire POPPY short "Bad Pilus Day" has Guy Diamond losing control over his Prehensile Hair, and is worried that he won't be able to go to Biggie's oncoming glowstick political party similar that. Poppy gets Biggie to permit hats in his party so that Guy's hair tin be kept controlled.
    • In "Trolly Tales 3", Poppy, Guy and DJ Suki have to fill in Gia Grooves' role at the Troll Village child daycare center due to her hair undergoing the same status as Guy's in the previous instance in a higher place, which is claimed that it will concluding her the unabridged twenty-four hours.
  • Bait-and-Switch Accusation: Branch wasn't invited to play Glitterball with the Snack Pack.
  • Balloon-Bursting Bird: Exaggerated in "CJ's Wooferbug", which features a flock of "Cactus Birds" who literally have cactus peel.
  • Bare Your Midriff: Not only do nosotros take DJ Suki, only we now got her niece CJ, whose outfit is roughly similar to hers.
  • Be Conscientious What Y'all Wish For: in "Branch Bum", Poppy wishes for once that Co-operative would stop thinking well-nigh danger. This goes besides well, when they ended up on a relaxed Island free of danger, and Co-operative suddenly becomes a more relaxed version of himself called "Frond". But when a storm appears and the boat is cracking nether pressure, Poopy eventually regrets her wish.

    Poppy: Look, I'm lamentable, Ok? Yep, the quondam Co-operative drives me crazy sometimes, Merely I've never should've wished him away. We demand you, we need Branch.

  • Belligerent Sexual Tension: A lot of Branch and Poppy'due south ship tease moments come from them becoming hands competitive with each other.
  • Berserk Button: Smidge really doesn't like it when you lot prank her. What happens if you exercise so?
    • Allow's non fifty-fifty bring up Prank Solar day in front of her. At all. Information technology'due south actually a ruse Poppy sets upwards to prank Branch once and for all; this can be noted in that Smidge is nowadays for pranks and even called over for Poppy's big prank idea before the story about Smidge's Berserk Button is told.
  • Big Eater: Cooper eats an unabridged pie made for a Bergen in "Funishment".
    • He also eats many pies gear up by Smidge in "Prank Day".
  • Big "NO!": At the end of "Ii-Party System", this is Poppy's reaction to being told that she threw Branch's altogether political party a day early on.
  • Altogether Episode: That aforementioned episode has Poppy knowing that Bridget and Co-operative share the same birthday, although in the cease Branch's birthday is until tomorrow.
  • Blatant Lies:

    Chenille: It was Satin. Happy Prank Twenty-four hours!

  • Broken Aesop: Spoofed in "Mr. Glittercakes." After Branch meets several other trolls who, like him, enjoy lone time, they finish upwards creating a system to serve every bit new friends they fabricated up every bit an excuse to become out of events with their usual group of friends. When Branch has had plenty he delivers the Aesop of "your friends will empathise if you but desire to be lonely from time to fourth dimension." And so it's revealed that Poppy arranged the entire thing for Branch to learn the lesson. Branch angrily points out that Poppy could have just talked to him instead of setting up an elaborate plot.

    Poppy: Huh... Fair point, Branch!

    (banner reading "Fair Point" drops downward)

  • Telephone call-Back: In episode four, Poppy says this line to Branch while training to play Bergenball as a proffer of "trash talk", referencing the moving picture'due south major plot point:

    Poppy: "You lot're nothin', Co-operative! I eat trolls similar you for breakfast. Blammo! Now y'all try."

    • Branch snapping a stick to Cloud Guy'due south face that causes him to "cry" in "Laugh-Out Deject" is a reference to when he gives the troll a high-5.
    • Co-operative interrupting the musical note at the first is similar to how he sarcastically applauds to the Snack Pack when he was kickoff introduced in the beginning of the moving picture in "Prank Solar day".
    • Gristle and Bridget recall how they were offset in honey in "Sorry Not Distressing".
    • The song "Get back up once again" from the picture show is referenced past Master Controll in his compliment rap battle against Poppy with the line:

    "Crusade if I knock knock you lot over y'all get support once again".

    • "The Biggest, The Loudest, The Craziest Political party Ever!" is referenced in Rainbowmaggedon.
    • When Poppy correctly guesses what Branch will alter his bunker's password to (afterward having already guessed his original password in one try), Poppy repeats the "I'm in your head, Co-operative!" line in the same way she does in "Prank Mean solar day".
    • The terrible joke Branch told in "Giggleyum" returns in "To Catch a Critter", which is used to lure out i of the missing creatures.
  • Calvinball: Glitterball for the trolls, Bergenball for the Bergens.
  • Canon Discontinuity: The show isn't considered part of the 3D canon storyline by neither fans nor the show's staff, instead existing every bit mere "secondary catechism". The prove had ignored certain plot elements from the first moving-picture show at times, which is particularly evident in Co-operative's childhood flashbacks.
    • This is particularly truthful in regards to Branch's moving picture backstory. He is always depicted equally a child featured with his adult colouration, as it is seen in the evidence. However, Branch was grey for over 20 years prior to both the movies storyline and the shows beginning; he should exist grey in all of the appearences equally nigh outcome accept place within the xx years since the Trolls broke out of Bergen Town. When his childhood is brought up, the show but talks nearly the last x years since he supposdly started his "Bunker Days".
    • Speaking of which, life in the Troll Tree is never mentioned at all in the testify and as a result the imprisonment of the Trolls in Troll town is never best-selling. King Peppy is mentioned to have had a number of adventures in his youth - none of which were hindered by the presence of the Bergens at all.
  • The Chew Toy: Branch takes a lot of abuse in the serial, especially in earlier episodes.
  • Cliffhanger: For a mostly episodic show, a good number of seasons end on a cliffhanger of some sort;
    • Flavor 2: The gang stumble upon evidence that at that place is an imposter Troll in Troll Hamlet
    • Flavour 3: After making a Heel–Face Turn, Archer reveals he wasn't the simply imposter Troll and that the Party Crashers are on their way
    • Flavour iv: With the Wormhole they had used at the beginning of the episode unstable, the gang jumps through without any assurance that it will have them dorsum where they came from.
    • Season 5: Branch and Poppy return to Troll Village after rescuing Co-operative's birds to find everyone in a state of petrification. It was simply a game of freeze tag.
    • Season eight: Thanks to Deject Guy, Branch'south bunker is about to explode in ten seconds. This was later confirmed to be a gag, since the staff didn't intend information technology to be an actual cliffhanger.
    • Season half-dozen and vii are notable for not ending on a cliffhanger.
  • Cloudcuckoolander: Any of the trolls sans Branch, mainly Cooper, who'south too the Plucky Comic Relief.
  • Companion Cube / I Call It "Vera": Branch talks to a remote he calls "Gary". He even treats it like his son! Later, the Snack Pack borrow the remote for a twenty-four hours, and they as well care for "Gary" equally one of their own.
  • Continuity Nod:
    • In "Dinkles Dinkles Little Star", after mocking Mr. Dinkles In front of Biggie, Groth comes back for a second to clarify that they are laughing at him, not with him. In "Bad News Bergens", Biggie did not initially understand that the bergens' team were laughing at the troll's squad to mock them, and started laughing along until Poppy pointed out that they were being laughed at.
    • In "The Political party Games", when Guy Diamond is shocked that the new guy Archer Pastry is just every bit proficient as he is at the party games dispite never having participated before, Smidge sees his expression, and subsequently trying to get his attention, says: "Uh-oh. That's the "I feel threatened by a young upstart" stare. I know it well". And she should know information technology well - she had the aforementioned reaction to Guy opening his glitterade stand beyond from her stoutberry juice stand in "Unhealthy Competition".
  • Cool and Unusual Punishment: The "funishments", from the episode of the aforementioned name, in which trolls have lots of fun when punished, considering really punishing a troll is void in Troll Village.
  • "Could Have Avoided This!" Plot: A large part of the plot of "Mr. Glittercakes" is based effectually this trope.
  • Counting to Potato: Deject Guy does a variant of this in "Laugh-Out Cloud" when coming up with a listing of rules for best friends to do.

    Deject Guy: Best friends rule número uno: Best buds always retrieve alike.
    Dominion B: Best buds always need a best buds photo album.
    Arbitrary rule number 3: Best buds never miss their target.
    Rule number cuatro: All-time buds boogie, baby.

  • Courtroom Episode: "Tall Tail", where Branch tries to prove Creek committed a Political party Foul (forgetting to bring fondue, rather than having to give it to a foreign creature like he claimed). he ends up winning the trial, but learns the hard way that Creek was right.
  • Crazy-Prepared: Branch all the same continues to connect with this trope because he likewise continues to presume that the Bergens volition still eat the trolls. His fear of birds comes up as a continuing reason for this.
    • Smidge already set up up traps for DJ and Cooper in a wink.
  • Creepy Child: Keith.
  • Cutting a Slice, Accept the Rest: When offered a troll-sized cup of punch in the first episode, Groth picks up and drinks the whole basin instead.
  • Beautiful Is Evil: While baby Cuddlepups are pretty much harmless, the developed ones are a threat to the Trolls.
  • Trip the light fantastic toe Political party Ending: Happened in Creek Week later Branch apologizes to Creek with a song.
  • Engagement Peepers: Subverted. Co-operative sees Cloud Guy and Poppy together, and must forbid him from hugging her.
  • Deadpan Snarker: Co-operative, however attached to this trope.
  • Demoted to Extra: Fuzzbert has an fifty-fifty shorter advent than its Snack Pack friends.
    • Biggie and Mr. Dinkles, of course, are featured but aren't focusable in "Fun Branch" in a like manner.
  • Denser and Wackier: More than Trolls did.
  • Disappeared Dad: Averted with King Peppy, who'southward still in Poppy's life as a recurring graphic symbol.
  • Does Not Know Her Own Strength: Smidge on occasion - she inadvertently breaks every os in Harper's body past giving her a celebratory high-five. She does it twice more than in the same episode.
  • "Do It Yourself" Theme Melody: The theme was performed by Poppy and Branch.
  • Don't Explain the Joke: Surprisingly Branch has this trouble.
  • DreamWorks Face up: Branch, at some times.
  • Easily Forgiven: When Creek returns in "Creek Week", he is immediately forgiven for betraying the Trolls by just virtually anybody except Branch. Poppy admits she doesn't fully forgive Creek either, but she is willing to requite him a 2d chance. Near the cease, Branch must apologize to Creek by singing a song.
  • Ending Theme: Changes In one case an Episode.
  • Escalating War:
    • "Prank Twenty-four hours" has Poppy and Branch pranking each other. Gone likewise far with Smidge taking over when Branch accidentally pushes her Berserk Button, merely the episode ends with everything being okay.
    • "Pillow War," where was it supposed to exist a pillow fight between Branch and Poppy turns into an all-out boxing with shades of Braveheart involving most of the hamlet, complete with Gristle whacking anybody with a Bergen-sized pillow in a weird metaphor for the atomic flop.
  • Everyone Has a Special Move: Branch, who can't be pranked in tribute of Prank Day. He especially follows Poppy's every motion.
  • Exactly What Information technology Says on the Tin: The championship of the series suggests that the music keeps on going for the Trolls and the Bergens.
  • Exact Words: When Cooper is told to tell someone everything, he will literally recount his entire life story upward to the point where he was told to tell everything (and it'south suggested he'll striking a recursive loop where he'll simply repeat it all until interrupted).
  • Excited Prove Championship!
  • Exorcist Caput: Washed by Smidge and lampshaded by Branch in the April Fools' Day Episode.

    F-North

  • Fantastic Fruits and Vegetables:
    • Stoutberries, which abound equally hoops on the vine. True to their name, they're then sturdy that Smidge is the only troll that tin can juice them, until Guy Diamond figures out how to do so by slapping a zipper onto them.
    • Marshtatos, the trolls well-nigh favorite dessert treat. They recollect they only sprout annually, nether the auspices of a shy fairy, but really they grow all the fourth dimension and are hoarded by a greedy fairy-like beingness except for the one day it's as well foggy for her to find them.
  • On Funsgiving a popular chief treat is Diced Fruit. That is, a large fruit that grows in the shape of a die.
    • One episode revolves effectually the gigglefruit, which can only be acquired by making their trees laugh.
  • Fantastic Light Source: The fact that trolls can make their hair glow is demonstrated a lot. At ane indicate a concert crowd does a Raised Lighter Tribute using their pilus.
  • Feathered Fiend: Branch is revealed to accept a fear of birds, which at one point Cloud Guy scares him past morphing his head into a bird.
  • Feud Episode: "Unhealthy Competition" and "Prank Twenty-four hour period".
  • Fictional Holiday: As aleadry mentioned in Trolls Holiday, the Trolls appear to have a vacation for almost every twenty-four hours!
    • Bellow Bug Day in the episode of the same name. The titular Bellow Bug merely comes out every five years, and equally queen, Poppy must ensure that everything's in expert shape. Unfortunately, it doesn't.
    • Creek Week, also from a aforementioned-name episode. A calendar week-long consequence involving yoga in tribute to Creek.
    • Harvest Moon in "The Giver", where an unknown individual nicknamed "The Giver" leaves presents on that night every year. That so-called "Giver" was revealed to be Branch.
    • Hug Twenty-four hour period in "Cloudy With A Changes Of Hugs", where Trolls can simply hug together in singe pairs, as a fashion to testify the importance of hugs.
    • Prank Day in the same-proper noun episode. This is Co-operative's favorite vacation, which he first mentioned in "Blare Problems Twenty-four hour period", which involves a twenty-four hours full of pranks. Branch did mention that he will prank Poppy commencement, foreshadowing the episode.
    • Imperial Review Mean solar day from "Royal Review", where a poll about the current Queen/King's performance is hosted to all Trolls, who either mark a smiley confront or a frowny face. Those who have marked frowny faces must have "room for comeback" (eaten by sharks, for ane instance).
  • Fictional Sport: Bergenball
  • Fireball Eyeballs: Happened everytime someone recalls the incident in "Prank Day". Branch once lampshaded this trope.
  • Five Stages of Grief: When Sky Toronto isolates himself after Co-operative "kills" his tie, Sky Jr., Branch tries to reconcile with him and Sky goes through all five stages within fifteen seconds.
  • Forgiven, but Not Forgotten: Creek. He's been let dorsum into Troll Village, but it is telling that any direct appearances he has are few and far between. In improver, in "Creek Week" Poppy and the Snack Pack acknowledge that they at present know he's a coward.
  • Friendly Rivalry: Averted in "Unhealthy Competition", but in the stop, Smidge and Guy Diamond decide to make juice together, merely to find it ridiculous.
  • Friend to All Living Things: Trolls alive in harmony with nature and the series actually shows how much critters are used in their daily lives. At one point when Peppy is warned of a swamp monster, but besides told that it's lonely, he rallies a friendly mob with intent to befriend it.
  • Freudian Slip: In "Come across the Peppy", Branch can't stop calling Peppy as "King Poopy".
  • Glowing Gem: As seen in the episode "Gem Twenty-four hour period", the first strand of hair a Troll gets is cut and and then planted. Over the course of their life, every bit the Troll gains happiness, the pilus will develop into a flower with a gemstone, known equally a "Troll Gem", in its bloom. This gemstone glows in response to the sound of its Troll's singing.
  • Grows on Trees:
    • In "Pillow State of war" it'south shown that the trolls utilise pillows that grow on copse from a grove that they harvest annually.
    • "Hair-Jitsu" has trees that grow black headbands...that move and are capable of fighting.
  • Hairy Hammerspace: Trolls regularly store things in their hair.
  • Happy Altogether to You!: Sung in "Two-Party System" when the trolls celebrate Bridget and Branch's birthday. Done mainly in Slo Mo.
  • Hard Truth Aesop:
    • Branch learns several times that even if someone has wronged you or made y'all justifiably angry, if your response is seen as asymmetric then y'all get the bad guy in the eyes of anybody else.
    • "Creek Week" teaches that friends tin forgive their friends for things other people find admittedly unforgivable, and dwelling on the fact that someone was Easily Forgiven when you lot don't think they deserved it makes them see you lot in a poor light.
  • I Know Kung-Simulated: The eponymous "Hair-Jitsu" is a martial art for trolls that naturally focuses on using their hair, which Poppy is revealed to exist a master in. Its most avant-garde technique is the Hairball-doken.
  • I Am Not Weasel: Cooper mistakens Poppy for a cake. Poppy is not tickled.
  • Affect Silhouette: In "Fun Branch", Cooper makes these in several troll houses, requiring their occupants to bunk with Branch while they're repaired.
  • Incredibly Lame Pun:

    Branch: Hey, does anyone hear a kitten? Because Poppy just got purr-anked.

    • Afterwards...

    Poppy: (after putting whipped foam on Imitation!Branch) You must exist a pirate, Branch, 'cause you just walked the prank!

  • Is It Something Y'all Consume?: In "Sorry Non Sad," when Gristle is told that Bridget wants an apology, he replies, "Sounds familiar. That'southward a cake, right?"
  • Jar Potty: "Laugh Out Cloud" reveals that Branch keeps his urine in jars, grossing out Poppy.
  • Wiggle with a Heart of Gold: Creek, equally opposed to his Jerk with a Heart of Jerk side of things.
  • Joke of the Barrel: Although Guy was subject to a few low-cal barrel jokes in the movie, he's more commonly prone to them hither.
  • Lampshade Hanging: Commonly, some of the more than cartoony aspects of the bear witness will be commented on by the other characters, like Branch wondering how everyone else could practice Fireball Eyeballs in "Prank Mean solar day," or Smidge wondering but how Branch could build half of a boat in seconds under their anxiety in "Branch Bum."
  • Let Usa Never Speak of This Once more: Comes up several times in "Wormhole," when Smidge, DJ Suki, and Guy Diamond emerge from different wormholes all Covered in Gunge, and all three want to forget whatever just happened.
  • Piffling Miss Badass: Smidge. It's shown repeatedly that she's the strongest of the Snack Pack despite her size, and is ofttimes the first to resort to violence. She concluded upwards breaking every bone in Harper'south body just by loftier-fiving her. Considering of this Smidge believes her crush, the kind, gentle Milton Moss wouldn't be interested in her. She's wrong.
  • Loads and Loads of Characters: Throughout the series' airing, over 60 characters have been included. Many of them take primary or recurring roles, and even those who were One-Shot Characters are usually given a major part in the episode where they announced.
  • Lost Food Grievance: Cooper steals Groth'south pie by eating it in Funishment.
  • Love at First Punch: Fistbump, actually. When Smidge drops the deception and gives Milton Moss a fistbump so hard it knocks him off his feet, he'south clearly smitten.
  • Come across the In-Laws: Despite the Ambiguous Situation noted above about the verbal nature of their relationship in the testify, "Meet The Peppy" plays out like i of these, with Co-operative desperately trying to earn Peppy'south approval. To Poppy's consternation, the two end upwards bonding over noting her flaws.
  • Memento MacGuffin: A bullseye given to Co-operative in "Fun Branch".
  • Mini-Golf Episode: "Peril Patch", where the trolls come beyond a mini-golf grade which is actually a trap designed to lure them in.
  • Mining for Cookies: A throwaway detail in an episode shows that trolls mine for sprinkles.
  • Common Green-eyed: In "Unhealthy Competition".
  • My Love Smother: Cloud Guy'southward parents are incredibly overbearing, which Branch discovers afterward inviting them over in an try to bulldoze him abroad. They only leave when left with nothing to exercise considering they want to dote on someone so much.
  • My God, What Have I Done?:
    • Branch's reaction in "Fun Branch" when he bothers the Snack Pack too much.
    • Likewise Branch'southward reaction when he pulls out the equivalent of a nuclear option during the pillow war: King Gristle, laying waste on the trolls with a Bergen-sized pillow.
  • Never My Fault: Twice, Poppy has blamed Branch for something that was her fault (throwing the disastrous party in the first episode), and fabricated Branch take office of the arraign for giving Gristle the wrong thought by saying "we've messed upwardly".
  • Nice Job Breaking It, Hero:
    • In "Majestic Review", Poppy and Smidge lead a mother Cuddlepup to the village by bringing in her puppies.
    • In "Creek Week" Branch tricks Creek into thinking he's brave. The Snack Pack are not amused at his jealousy.
    • In "Prank Day", Branch accidentally pranks Smidge via a water balloon, causing her to get on a "revenge streak".
  • No Guy Wants an Amazon: Smidge'due south concern nearly her trounce, Milton Moss in "Crushin' It". Turns out he might really exist an Amazon Chaser.
  • No Object Permanence: Did Poppy mention that Hug Time is all the time at the end of the movie? Heck, the Hug Time bracelets. They weren't abandoned. They were nevertheless on the trolls' wrists, and tin can simply be seen when they're lit up, to imply that information technology's hug fourth dimension. Completely averted for Creek's.
  • No Prison Segregation: The Fun Dungeon, a building originally established in "Funishment", was meant to be used to punish both male and female Trolls, and information technology overloads with them in the episode's climax part earlier finally being left unused. In "Party Crashed", the Party Crashers also kept Poppy (female) and Branch (male) together in the dungeon upon capturing them.
  • Non a Date: At the end of "Cloudy with a Gamble of Hugs". Turns out that Deject Guy set up up a fake date with Poppy to fool Branch. He was Comically Missing the Point over the fact that trolls tin can only hug one troll.

    Cloud Guy: Hello? I'k a Cloud Guy.

  • The Not-So-Harmless Punishment: Happens several times in "Prank Day":
    • Poppy (and at the very end, Branch) is splattered in frosting.
    • Branch spits bubblegum on Poppy.
    • Smidge (though accidental) is covered in water by Branch.
    • Satin, Chenille, and Guy are caught past Smidge.
    • DJ Suki is caught in a comfortable bed.
    • Cooper eats too many pies.
  • Nutritional Nightmare: The "Snuggler" in "Hug Fest"; a hot domestic dog in a cupcake, which is then covered in three types of cheese, put into a brownie, and the whole matter surrounded in a ball of deep-fried batter. Branch orders it to stall for time just loses his appetite upon receiving it.

    O-Z

  • Once per Episode: There's at least ane song in each episode and not always sung by the trolls and even weaponized as We Need a Distraction a few times. Adventures in Dinkles-sitting downplays this, it lacks the glitz and glam and Branch is barely singing. Justified as it'south a vocal from his childhood and he'south clearly embarrassed to be singing it in front of Poppy.
  • Simply One Who Likes Spam:
    • In the episode "Fluffleberry Quest", the Snack Pack go on a mission to restore the lost Fluffleberry cake recipe made by Branch's grandmother. In one case the recipe is restored, the Snack Pack decide to try a Fluffleberry block for themselves, but they think that information technology has a missing ingredient once they find it to accept a bad taste. They become on another trip in guild to find the supposed missing ingredient, just to be told past Branch that information technology was used to make the dish and the cake's recipe was really right. He takes a piece of the block for himself, which gets the rest of the Snack Pack disgusted.
    • Trolls have been shown to generally dislike Fluffleberry. The only other Troll who's shown to like it is Nova Swift, who was seen drinking a Fluffleberry latte.
  • Overly Long Gag: Cooper telling his life story to Poppy and Smidge in "The Giver". Only a few excerpts are mentioned on screen, though.
  • Overly Long Title: Branch suggests renaming Creek Calendar week to "Troll Who Sold Usa Out by Trying to Feed U.s. to Bergens Merely to Save His Own Skin Week." Of course, Poppy asks him that if he can say it in rhyme.
  • Parental Abandonment: Co-operative's parents in "Fun Co-operative", who are somewhat eaten by the Bergens just like Co-operative's grandma back in the movie. Averted with Poppy, as Peppy was seen in a few episodes, about notably "Royal Review".
  • Penny-Pinching Crab: There are crab critters that alive in the lake who love to snatch whatsoever a poor troll has that catches their interest. There's an entire swarm of them and they can bring together upwards together into a giant crab which makes fending them off impossible once they set their sights on something.
  • Power Dyes Your Hair: The power of Spring Scares, that is, for the trolls, in "The Poppy Horror Picture Show". The story frightened the trolls so much that their hair turned white and ran away. Co-operative and Poppy weren't that scared.
    • They return to normal by the side by side day, but this gives Biggie no effect.
  • Prank Gone Too Far: Standing from the moving picture, Branch remains the target of Cloud Guy for his pranks and jokes, since they annoy him a lot. In the show's later seasons, though, Branch somewhen gets used to the pranks, which gives Deject Guy a trouble addressed in "Apple tree of My Ire".
    • Co-operative falls victim of this when Smidge accidentally falls subject to his pranks in "Prank Day", making her brainstorm a "revenge streak" on everyone else in the Snack Pack.
  • Pranking Montage: "Prank Twenty-four hours" has several curt pranking montages between the chief plot scenes.
  • The Prankster: Mainly Branch; in "Prank Mean solar day", Poppy and Branch prank each other in lodge for either one to earn the championship of "Prank Chief".
  • Rapid Pilus Growth: In one episode, information technology's revealed that the trolls' hair quickly grow back when cut. Because it'due south magic.
  • Reference Overdosed: While the Trolls movies have made a few references, Trolls: The Beat Goes On! takes it further by including a bunch of them per each season, a decent part of which come from episode titles. See the show's Shout-Out page for a list.
  • Reformed, but Rejected: Inverted in "Creek Week". Creek returns, genuinely remorseful, and the Snack Pack forgives him immediately, with the exception of Branch, who spends the episode trying to expose him, and Poppy, who is understandably skeptical, simply every bit queen has to requite him the benefit of the doubt.
  • Right for the Wrong Reasons: Guy Diamond'due south initial dislike of Archer was just Guy being jealous of Archer'southward skill during the Party Games. Turns out Archer's an imposter and sentinel for the Party Crashers.
  • Royals Who Really Practise Something: The series did not forget that Poppy was crowned queen at the end of the motion-picture show. A fair amount of Poppy's decisions throughout the prove are with people and her position equally queen in mind, whether information technology exist keeping the people at-home in a crisis or commemorating a new tree sapling.
  • Running Gag:
    • Co-operative being hit past a sheep in "Fun Branch".
    • Branch dropping frosting on Poppy in "Prank Day".
  • Rule of Funny: "Fun Branch" has Branch inviting the Snack Pack into his bunker, in a chance to prove he's fun.
  • Scheherezade Gambit: Keith ends upwardly using this in "Trolly Tales 2" to aid Archer befriend the Trolls.
  • Seasonal Baggage: Happens in function of the scrapbook montage of "Wormhole", though information technology'south only limited to hot and winter seasons.
  • Secret Diary: Branch has one in "Cloudy with a Chance of Hugs". To give it dorsum to him, Cloud Guy helps Co-operative set up some rules. He didn't read it, however.
  • Cocky-Proclaimed Dear Involvement: Cloud Guy to Poppy in "Cloudy with a Chance of Hugs".
  • Sequel Episode: Some season finale episodes with a bewilderment have the premiere episode of the adjacent season as their sequel. Examples include "Wormhole" to "Co-operative Bum" and "Blank Day" to "Bringing Upwards Birdy" (the latter'due south case however, opens with a Halfway Plot Switch instead of continuing with the previous episode's storyline).
    • The longest serial of episodes with adjacent plots are the ones dealing with the Party Crashers, consisting of Season 2's "The Party Games" and "Pillow War"; Season 3'due south "The Imposter", "The Frenemy", "Trolly Tales two" and "Lost in the Woods"; and Season iv's "Party Crashed".
  • Slice of Life: Compared to the first movie, this series orients more towards storylines involving the day-to-twenty-four hours lifes of the main cast, though there are all the same some episodes of a similar nature to the pic.
  • Ho-hum "NO!": When the Snack Pack warn Smidge near the h2o balloon in "Prank 24-hour interval".
  • Spoof Aesop: According to Cloud Guy, the moral of "Rainbowmagedon" is that "truth can be whatever you want if yous're selective." Poppy lampshades that it's probably non the best lesson to accept away from it.
  • Still Believes in Santa: Exaggerated. In the episode "Marshtato Fairy", information technology's shown that, as a standard for Troll lodge, every Troll believes in their entire life well-nigh the beingness of a titular Marshtato Fairy grapheme, who is responsible for the supposed almanac Marshtato harvest. The only Troll to have known the truth behind the myth thus far was Branch, merely he decided to not tell information technology in order to avoid ruining the Trolls' life.
  • Sugar Apocalypse: "Rainbowmageddon" is about the aging of a rainbow and a meteoric rain of its pieces potentially causing a Class 0 on Troll Village.
  • Surprisingly Realistic Outcomes: Rather than perform a Happy Catastrophe Override, the serial looks into the consequences of the movie's ending.
    • While the Bergens are no longer out to eat trolls, and it'south clear that they do sympathise happiness tin be found outside of eating i, there are nonetheless plenty of tensions betwixt the ii groups, forth with enough of cultural misunderstandings that the parties have to actively work to resolve.
    • Yes, Branch did get his colors back and is capable of existence happy again. That said, it doesn't erase who he was, and he nevertheless has a paranoid and pessimistic streak that he can behave too far. He fifty-fifty does a Lampshade Hanging a few times that his current attitude is still pretty new, and all the same has issues to piece of work through.
    • Several episodes have Poppy dealing with her newfound responsibilities as queen. Naturally, her happy-go-lucky attitude isn't enough to solve certain bug the hamlet has.
  • Suspiciously Similar Substitute: Cooper is seen attending Creek Calendar week, before Creek himself came in.
  • Taking You with Me: Co-operative explicitly invokes this with a cocky-destruct mechanism built into his bunker.
  • Temporary Blindness: Happens to Biggie in "Adventures in Dinkles-Sitting".
  • Temporal Paradox: In "Scrap to the Future" Poppy finds a scrapbook that can tell the hereafter. Later realizing information technology'due south simply lead to a series of Self-Fulfilling Prophecies she tosses the book, that lands in a wormhole that spits it out just moments before Poppy first found it at the start of the episode.
  • Thanksgiving Episode: The titular holiday of the episode "Funsgiving" is based on Thanksgiving.
  • The Thing That Would Not Leave: Deject Guy becomes this for Branch in "Two's A Deject." Branch tries to convince Deject Guy to leave by inviting the latter's parents to come visit, only for them to movement in besides.
  • Torches and Pitchforks: Except trolls are likewise nice to use pitchforks, the torches are the glowing tips of their hair, and they organize into a friendly mob to befriend any targets.
  • Troll: Pun aside, if Cloud Guy's in an episode, odds are he's this for Co-operative.
  • Two Shorts: Most of the episodes are divided into ii segments that are usually unrelated to each other. The just episode that doesn't follow this format is "Party Crashed", which has a single storyline for its entire length.
  • 2-Timer Date: In "Ii-Party Organization", Poppy runs herself ragged trying to run two birthdays for Branch and Bridget. She's keeping their parties a secret between them because she doesn't desire them to feel anything less than totally special and important. When they find out Co-operative and Bridget are both rightfully upset, because Poppy was putting a lot of pressure on herself.
  • Unexplained Recovery: Creek, who was eaten aslope Chef at the end of Trolls, survived his fate, and returned in "Creek Calendar week". How he escaped is unknown, but he did survive.
  • Unishment: The episode "Funishment" is all most this trope: Cooper eats up a Bergen'southward pie and the Bergen demands he be punished for this. Poppy decides the almost merciful way to exercise so is put him in jail, which is also the most conventional and mutual way but she thinks Cooper will become bored with nada to do in there so she installs a playground inside for Cooper to enjoy.
  • Uvula Escape Route: In "Finn Cascade", Branch is swallowed past the episode's titular fish after trying to impress him several times and then that he would befriend him. With Baha, he eventually finds the way to escape from Finn's mouth by blocking his blowhole and hanging onto his uvula.
  • Wax On, Wax Off: In the episode "Hairjitsu", Co-operative wants to learn the titular martial art and Poppy teaches him this fashion.
  • What Happened to the Mouse?: After their story arc ended with "Political party Crashed", all of the Party Crashers, including Archer, never appear again for the rest of the series. Guy lampshades this in "Tour Guide of Duty" when he mentions the arc's events without maxim the group'southward proper name.
    • Word of God has it that the Party Crashers were dropped out because they would've disrupted with the concept of Earth Tour. Meet the series' What Could Have Been page for farther data most this.
  • What the Hell, Hero?: Played for laughs in the third season premiere. Branch goes on a conspiratorial rant virtually how the hidden box of disguises belongs to a not-troll burglar that needs to exist rooted out. Poppy non only dismisses Co-operative's concerns (comically revealing that every other troll has one), but she has an entire musical number that encourages everyone in the village to ignore Branch. After all the others leave, though, she quickly admits Branch is right and that he needs to assist her find the infiltrator. Branch immediately calls Poppy out for the previous vocal (she justifies it by noting how easily trolls panic, and she "had to actually sell information technology").
  • Why Did It Have to Exist Snakes?: Branch is given a fright of birds in this series. The origin of which remained unexplained until Season 5.
  • Zipperiffic: At one point, Guy Diamond uses a attachment to zip out all the stoutberry juice to make his glitterade.

gaglianoandill.blogspot.com

Source: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/WesternAnimation/TrollsTheBeatGoesOn

0 Response to "Laugh Out Cloud Trolls Branch Harvest Baby Tears"

Post a Comment

Iklan Atas Artikel

Iklan Tengah Artikel 1

Iklan Tengah Artikel 2

Iklan Bawah Artikel