Breather Episode
"Yes, we're worried about the captive...but right now Negi and friends are enjoying a brief moment of relaxation!♥"
Writing television is not born out of a powerful compulsion to torture imaginary people.
Really! At least hypothetically. In a few rare cases, it isn't.
One purpose of a Story Arc is to provide the necessary time to really get in there and just destroy everything. Crunch up the Love Interest, alienate the friends, heap a bunch of victories on the Big Bad, let all the phlebotinum leak out of the superpower, maybe throw in a scorching case of herpes and a drug dependency... you know, just do everything you can to grind a protagonist into a sticky paste.
While this is fun and all, it can occasionally get to be a little overbearing for the audience. The trick is to throw in a Breather Episode before they become too terrified to tune in, something a little Lighter and Softer in tone.
The Breather Episode is used after a particularly grueling and emotional story arc or episode, and serves to lighten the mood; to contrast with the "dark" mood of the previous episode. These might feature several musical numbers and comic relief appearances by minor characters. They are presented in a fun-house manner, with plenty of bright and cheery colors.
It is tricky to get this just right as, improperly done, it makes the characters appear unsympathetic or in denial about the overarching plot.
This is not to be confused with Filler, though many breather episodes would qualify.
In Anime, this will often be the beach or vacation episode.
In Video Games, this trope may occur as well, but there's also a variant of the trope applied to the game's difficulty rather than the game's content: see Breather Level.
See also Mood Whiplash. Contrast Wham! Episode. Occasionally, this will be a Non Sequitur Scene Episode]].
Anime and Manga
- Slayers NEXT has an episode, in the middle of a Stern Chase, where they stop everything to fish for lake dragon, when Lina tries to buy some "dragon cuisine" and finds that it is fake. The series breaks the fourth wall at the end of one such episode right before the final act of the series, when Zelgadis laments that the adventure will probably be the last easygoing thing they'll get to do this series.
- Slayers TRY has a breather episode disguised as a plot episode. Lina finds herself in a strange sort of wonderland pastiche, and is given to believe that it is the chaos between worlds, and that she ended up here after having failed to save the world from destruction the previous episode. Turns out it's just a theme park they got knocked into.
- The 2003 anime adaptation of Fullmetal Alchemist featured a comedic episode centering on the State Military members directly under Roy Mustang's command, right in the center of an intense plot arc involving a rebellion in a remote city.
- My-HiME had no less than two breather moments (the first consisting of two episodes), each directly following a Wham! Episode. Episodes 9-10 were a Beach Episode followed by a Cooking Duel, but even they advanced the plot. Episode 16 turned out to be a Wham Episode by itself, thus making it two Wham Episodes in a row.
- A Yu-Gi-Oh! GX example is Jun's love-motivated duel with Asuka, coming directly between the defeat of the last 7 Star and the final battle of the arc.
- Black Lagoon had one breather episode between the Nazi arc and the Roberta arc, and a very over-the-top free-for-all gunfest mini-arc between the disturbing Hansel & Gretel arc and the final Japan arc (which was surprisingly deep at times... For Black Lagoon, anyhow).
- Greenback Jane is a breather mini-arc. While it does have some disturbing moments, mostly it's just a Roanpur Ultimate Showdown of Ultimate Destiny.
- The first episode of each Higurashi no Naku Koro ni arc is usually nice and light-hearted, spending most of its time displaying anime comedy tropes, or simply showing a slice of life in Hinamizawa village. The episode will usually end on a slightly chilly note... And next episode, it gets worse. Big time.
- Umineko no Naku Koro ni is like this too, following a similar episode structure to Higurashi, except the spike from cheerful to fearsome is much sharper.
- Eureka Seven most notably has a breather episode where the main protagonists take a break to play a soccer match at the direction of their spiritual leader. When asked why he directed them to do so, he reveals that it is, literally, a breather episode for both the audience and the characters.
- Sky Girls has several breather episodes. However, each breather episodes almost always turn to plot-relevant, and sometimes a Wham! Episode combined. Examples: one episode has Otoha running around the base to look for the owner of a very large bra. It's all fun, but the beginning starts as Elise's backstory (her home getting destroyed). One Onsen Episode gives The Reveal as the girls learn that they're not just an aerobatic team, they're there specifically to take down a breed of monsters long thought to have been extinct.
- Code Geass uses School Festival episodes to keep the show from getting too serious. However, as per the show's standard operating procedure, even the silly comedy episodes contain at least one serious plot point or a Cliff Hanger ending in order to keep things running.
- In the audio commentary for Stage 21 (the infamous "pizza festival" episode), it's actually directly stated that head writer Ichiro Okouchi thought that the plot at that point in the show was getting very serious and wanted to give everyone a break.
- Mahou Sensei Negima breaks formula a little by dumping a Furo Scene episode in the middle of a dramatic arc, right as the plot was building toward The Reveal.
- There are other breather episodes (usually a Beach Episode) between the other arcs; the abovementioned scene is just the most infamous because it's smack dab in the middle of a dramatic arc rather than before or after one.
- Basilisk, otherwise a very brutal and tragic story, has a Breather Episode two-thirds through which consists of flashbacks to flesh out some characters who have previously not been seeing doing anything but fighting. There are some very funny scenes with Oboro as a child, which are perhaps the only comedic moments in the series.
- Full Metal Panic! gave us an entire breather season in Fumoffu, which served to seriously crank up the Mood Whiplash for when The Second Raid came along.
- The Second Raid also has a Breather Episode of its own; episode six takes some time off from the warfare to focus on Sousuke and Kaname's relationship, providing some comedy and some quiet, touching moments before things get worse.
- The original series had these in a fixed rhythm: serious story - comedy episode(s) - serious story - comedy episode(s) - serious story... so things never got too gloomy.
- Shakugan no Shana episode 9 ("The Poolside of Love and Desire") is a breather after the defeat of the first major villain and the fierce fight between Shana and Margery Daw.
- For Soul Eater, only one word is necessary: EXCAAAAALIBURRRRRRR!!
- A few more, technically: one breather chapter also followed the Asura resurrection arc. The kids play basketball, the grown-ups regroup and talk. And panic about getting fired, if you're Spirit. It serves to deal with the outcome of the arc, plus introduce some secondary characters in the form of three more of the Death Scythes.
- In Fairy Tail, after a long arc about a war with a rival guild and Lucy confronting her father, we get a one-chapter story about the main cast taking a mission to perform at a failing theater then having to replace ALL of the actors who left after it got a bad review.
- Black Butler manga has a single Breather Episode between any two Story Arcs, always, no exceptions.
- Episode 23 of Darker than Black is a breather between November 11's death and the Grand Finale. In particular, about half the episode is spent on a Ship Tease-y sorta-date between Hei and Kirihara.
- The Bleach musical No Cloud in the Blue Heavens has a rather obvious one, where the dramatic reveal of Aizen being alive and the Big Bad is delayed so Aizen, Hinamori, and Hitsugaya can sing a happy little song while watching winter fireworks.
- Odd One Out in Halo Legends is the only non-canon short of the group, is comedic, and is shown between the two most tragic episodes.
- One episode of Inuyasha dealt with Inuyasha trying to get Kagome's brother a date, most episodes have them fighting horrible demons.
- Inuyasha in general loves these. After every multi-part epic battle against some Naraku-related/Jewel-shard-related uber-powerful demon you can bet there will be some goofy filler episode(s) before the action returns. And most of them are pretty hilarious, too.
- Rave Master takes a breather chapter before the final battle where everyone gets incredibly drunk and Haru fails to confess to Elie.
- One Piece has a breather story arc. After a huge, epic adventure where they fought a wannabe god, and right before another huge, epic adventure where they declared war on the world government, the Strawhat pirates took part in a decidedly light-hearted and thoroughly odd series of athletic challenges known as the Davy Back Fight. Although the crew would have been enslaved by a rival pirate captain if they had lost, the overall tone and the severe goofiness of the arc's villain made the whole thing feel like a nice break inbetween more serious storylines.
- Arguably the Amazon arc is part of this as well. It's not as lighthearted as many examples, but compared to Kuma blasting the Strawhats apart and both Impel Down and the Whitebeard War it's practically cotton candy.
- The anime features many examples in the form of short filler arcs or small series of individual filler episodes. The infamous moment mentioned in the above point was followed immediately after by a strictly Alternate Universe story about the Straw Hats participating in a palanquin race in an Edo Era-esque town. The climax of the Alabasta Arc was followed (even before the Rainbow Mist filler arc) by a trio of light-hearted episodes focusing each on Chopper, Nami, and Usopp. Similarly, a trio of lighthearted filler episodes premiered after the intense Enies Lobby arc focused on Luffy, Zoro, and Sanji individually. Toei loves this trope.
- Transformers Energon followed the episodes "Farewell Inferno" (Inferno struggles against Megatron's programming and ultimately dies) and "Scorponok's Scars" (Scorponok beats up Ironhide, and Alpha Q is forced to turn against his formerly constant companion) with "Crash Course", a silly episode about the Autobots having a big race. The characters themselves admit that having a race is a good way to release their recent tensions.
- Shukufuku no Campanella sets up the catalyst for the second half of the series in episode 7, which it does follow up on in episode 9. Episode 8, however, focuses on the comic relief characters of the Tortilla sisters and has hijinks ensue for all the cast involved during the harvest festival.
- After the display of Crazy Awesome that was episode 22, the creators of Tengen Toppa Gurren Lagann understood that viewers wouldn't be able to withstand the incredible amounts of Pure Awesomeness present in the last four episodes without a breather. So episode 23 was mostly made up of Team Dai-Gurren preparing to launch themselves towards the final battle. Oh, and Simon invented teleportation just so he could punch Rossiu in the face.
- Persona 4: The Animation has episode 5, bringing the plot to a halt after the Shadow Yukiko battle.
- Right after Mitsuo's capture, we get episodes 13 and 14 (summer vacation).
- Episode 19 focuses on the cultural festival right after a tense episode about Nanako's mother's death.
- Episode 6 of Gun X Sword is a goofy parody/comic episode, coming right after a fairly intense episode about revenge. The episode provides the opportunity for some development for the two main characters, but it doesn't do anything to advance the story arc until the last few minutes... when it drops a Wham! Line.
- Episode 5 of Puella Magi Madoka Magica is considerably lighter than the episodes that preceded or followed it. No mind-scarring trauma, Awful Truths, or horrible angst. Still not actually happy, though.
- The Elfen Lied OVA (a.k.a. episode 10.5) takes place between Nana's settling in the inn and Mariko's arrival, and consists mostly of comedic Slice of Life and bonding between Nana and Nyu. And Heartwarming.
- The entire reason why Fuuko makes appearances throughout Clannad After Story is so that the audience doesn't crawl up into a little ball in the corner and cry.
- Eyeshield 21's breather episodes tend to be pretty justified, given that serious athletes DO have to take rest days right after big games. Even the breather episodes tend to have bits of relevant information.
- Episodes 6 & 7 of Kore wa Zombie Desu ka? is fairly light-hearted in tone compared to the vicious fighting that takes place in episodes 5 & 6. Episode 12 is more like a Slice of Life episode where they hang out at a water park and then the female characters have a singing contest, in stark contrast to episodes 10 & 11, where they fought the Big Bad and attempt to foil his plans.
- Episodes 20 and 21 of Oniisama e... feature Nanako, Tomoko and Mariko going a school festival in Takehiko's university, as well as Mariko meeting Takehiko's friend Takeshi and being very Tsundere towards him. (Pretty much the only time Mariko's misandry is Played for Laughs.) And it happens right in between Nanako's Anguished Declaration of Love to Rei (episode 19) and Nanako witnessing Fukiko's Strange Girl behavior (episode 22) and Fukiko's absolutely disastrous birthday party (episode 23).
- Subverted in episode 8 of Another It's fairly light-hearted in stark contrast to the earlier episodes where people were getting killed left and right. Then the ending for the episode comes along...
Comic Books
- Many comic books do this between long arcs. JSA, for instance, usually has an issue between arcs that follows the individual characters as they recover, and also allows for roster changes.
- After a particularly draining arc in Ultimate Spider-Man, where Gwen Stacy was killed, the next two issues were a Freaky Friday-esque romp, as the still-teenage Spider-Man changed bodies with Wolverine because of Jean Grey, who picked Peter as "the person Logan would least like to be."
- Another Spidey example: In Spectacular Spider-Man, there was an arc called The Child Within with Harry Osborn's Green Goblin and Vermin. It was a six-part storyline with a seventh issue epilogue. It was emotionally brutal, heartwrenching, and helped set up Harry's death a year later. The issue following the epilogue, however, featured TWO Fabulous Frog-Men teaming up with Spidey to take on the White Rabbit and the Walrus, two villains bent on revenge against one of the Frog-men and his sidekick Spider-Man for defeats and humiliation suffered before.
- Gotham Knights #32, which comes straight after the Bruce Wayne: Murderer/Fugitive arc (a Batman crossover arc in which Bruce Wayne is accused of a murder and goes on the run for months) is a really nice breather issue. Only, of course, being about Batman, it's called 24/7 and it involves him getting up at 8 in the morning, spending his day in meetings convincing big business to be a little nicer, remembering the name of his paperboy, visiting the elderly, and then suiting up and fighting crime (and checking in on the rest of the Batfamily) until 5 am the next morning. It counts as a breather episode because there are no supervillains! (It's actually a really lovely issue. Bruce is practically mellow.)
- Invoked in Catwoman. The Relentless storyline was a particularly brutal arc with Black Mask—one of the darker Bat-villains—as the main antagonist. Cold-Blooded Torture, forced cannibalism, that sorta thing. After all was said and done, Selena thought her friend Holly could use a break and took her on a road trip to the various DC locales. The resulting story arc is intentionally lighthearted so that the readers could have a break as well.
- From issues 149 through 152 of Uncanny X-Men, we saw a pivotal confrontation between the X-Men and their Arch Enemy Magneto, followed by a stand-off against the Hellfire Club. Issue 153 provides the breather in "Kitty's Fairy Tale" as Kitty invents a bedtime story for Illyana, casting herself as a heroic pirate and the rest of the X-Men as other characters. By the end of the issue, the entire team is gathered around Illyana's room, listening to Kitty's story, and enjoying it immensely.
- We get another one in New X-Men. After a dramatic story arc in which Jean discover's Scott's infidelity and a traitor at the mansion tries to kill Emma, Scott goes out for a nice "boy's night out" with Logan and Fantomex, which involves them battling some cyborgs and breaking into Weapon Plus' space station. Then as soon as they get back from space, the "Planet X" arc snaps us back, as Magneto comes back from the dead to destroy half of Manhattan, and he and Jean are both killed in a dramatic battle.
Fan Works
- In One Piece: Parallel Works, after the awesome, heartwarming, sad, and epic Baleeira Porto Arc and the Crazy Awesome Tequila Wolf Arc, we have the Restaurant Row Arc, a light-hearted (if you can get past Sebastian's backstory) and comedic arc where the Capricorn Pirates look for a chef to join their crew.
- The one-shots "Kazuma and the Magic Toaster", "Why we Can't Celebrate Spring Break", and "Blame it on Flogging Molly Songs" can be considered breather episodes to One Piece: Parallel Works, since they're comedic, Crack Fics that have nothing to do with the main storyline.
- Aeon Entelechy Evangelion, a Neon Genesis Evangelion/Cthulhu Tech/First Encounter Assault Recon crossover fic with individual chapters having 20,000 words avarage of heavy descriptions of Eldritch horros, madness-inducing technology and other stuff has Chapter 6, a very short chapter about the cute and adorable 4-year old Asuka living happily with her mother.
- Two of these are in the Glee fic Hunting the Unicorn: "The Outlaws" (chapter four) is a well-needed Crowning Moment of Heartwarming (and funny) after three chapters of slowly breaking Kurt. "The Men At Arms" (chapter ten) comes after seven chapters of exposing Blaine as an insecure, fragile, seriously damaged Love Martyr who's put Kurt on a huge pedestal. It's also right before the Warblers drag Blaine into therapy, where he reveals that he's not a virgin and had a horrible, horrible breakup with his first. Oh yeah, and he now has a Stalker with a Crush.
- In the Pony POV Series, this happens in "Second Family". It comes right after the fearsome-filled Final Battle with the first Big Bad Loneliness. It's pretty much just the Mane Cast getting to know their Sixth Ranger Trixie and celebrating her Heel Face Turn with a party. This is directly followed by Fluttershy breaking completely and transforming into Princess Gaia.
- Happens again with "New Game Plus", which is set right in the middle of the "Mind Games" arc—the first half of Mind Games involves Onyx Tiara finally dealing with his issues and getting over them while Discord goads Diamond Tiara into freeing him, then New Game Plus has the author trying to link some more canon episodes with the fic's universe (there are dark moments, yes, but it's still mostly light-hearted), and then the second half of Mind Games has Diamond working up to freeing Discord and going completely insane in the process, and is set to lead right into the Finale arc.
- There's also "Different From Everypony Else", which is set right after "New Game Plus", but was published between the last two chapters of "Mind Games", giving one last break from the darkness of that arc. True, this installment still has its dark moments, but it's ultimately lighthearted, and even it's dark moments don't compare to the content of Mind Games.
- Futari wa Pretty Cure Blue Moon has a handful of them, none more obvious than episode 19. The preceding arc revolves around the girls losing all but one of their Moon Pieces, discovering Echoes, and learning about Mekuramast's and Kainatrol's Start of Darkness. The following arc starts with the School Festival being derailed and leading into the climax. Episode 19, aside from revealing Dawn's identity, just focuses on the main characters trying to put together a talent show in under a week.
- Nobody Dies has piles of them, the most memorable being the one where Rei learns to drive. Most of them end up being Innocuously Important Episodes, though.
- Calvin and Hobbes: The Series has "Roughin' It", which only has the titular duo and a few locations. It also comes become season finale "The Alien Huntress", which is incredibly insane.
- Something similar happens, sans Bottle Episode, with "Robot's Day Out".
Film - Animated
- Cars 2 is more or less this among Pixar films following 3 years of ever increasing tear jerkage from WALL-E, Up, and Toy Story 3.
- And next, we have Brave.
- Gore Verbinski intended Rango to be this career-wise following his work on the Pirates of the Caribbean trilogy. Of course, he underestimated how painstaking and time-consuming animation really was.
- Allegro Non Troppo (a feature film composed of animated shorts, like Fantasia) has its most depressive short, Valse Triste, followed by an hilarious short of a bee having her meal interrupted.
- Hercules is this, sandwiched in the middle of some of Disney's Darker and Edgier Renaissance films - namely, The Lion King, Pocahontas, The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Mulan, and Tarzan.
- The Emperors New Groove may probably count as well.
Film
- It could be argued that Star Trek IV the Voyage Home was a breather episode after Star Trek II the Wrath of Khan and Star Trek III the Search For Spock.
- Co-writer and Director Leonard Nimoy has acknowleged this in interviews.
- The costume party in Mystery Team.
- Ingmar Bergman added a film break to Persona to give viewers a break from the copious amounts of Mind Screw.
Literature
- Literature example: In John Dies at the End, immediately after Dave reveals that the reason he was sent to a special school was that he was implicitly gangraped in highschool and retaliated by cutting out the eyes of the ringleader, there's an entire chapter narrated by the Cloudcuckoolander sidekick and Unreliable Narrator John, which involves backflips, kung-fu fighting, and horse-theft.
- Also, after one story arc, there is a chapter that consists entirely of "Nothing happened for the next few months".
- Very similarly, in Stephen King's It, right between one epic battle with the monster and the beginning of the events leading up to the last, is the mini-chapter (he numbers sections within titled chapters) which consists entirely of "Nothing much happened for the next two weeks."
- Harry Potter and The Prisoner of Azkaban could be viewed as this for the Harry Potter series, being a comparatively laid-back story (apart from the Dementors) which does not have anything directly to do with Voldemort and immediately precedes his return in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. It also comes after Chamber of Secrets, which is an Actionized Sequel involving students being attacked by a monster, leading to a year-long reign of terror which threatens to close the school. In comparison, Sirius Black coming after Harry in particular is rather low stakes.
- Half Blood Prince was set between the two most emotionally turbulent books in the series. After the fifth book ends with Harry breaking down in Dumbledore's office, Dumbledore is much more above-board and the focus is split between Harry learning about Voldemort's past and the various ships. The drama comes back in full force in the last few chapters, but it's mostly much-needed breathing space.
- So Long And Thanks For All The Fish
- Q & A, from the Star Trek Expanded Universe. And considering the plot hinges on the destruction of every universe in existence EVER, that's really saying something about the other novels, no?
- Animorphs #44 The Unexpected qualifies. It comes right before the 11 book arc that ended the series, it has nothing in the way of character or plot development, and the events (Cassie getting stranded in the Australian outback) are not mentioned again.
- #24, The Suspicion also qualifies as it's largely comedic and directly follows a major Wham Novel.
- A Certain Magical Index:
- New Testament Volume 2 follows the action-packed first volume, and is mainly a mixture of exposition and comedic interactions between various characters. There is a more serious subplot about a giant floating fortress about to be dropped on Academy City, but this is resolved with relatively little drama.
- New Testament Volume 11, even more so. The preceding Magic God Othinus arc was one of the most climactic in the series, with conflict on a global and universal scale. This volume focuses on previously-minor character Misaki and the main conflict is entirely personal.
Live Action TV
- The second half of the second season of Buffy the Vampire Slayer featured one of the show's darker arcs. Comedic episodes such as "Bewitched, Bothered, and Bewildered" and "Go Fish" lightened the mood.
- "Tabula Rasa," an episode of wacky mind-loss comedy before we plunge head long into darkness, and don't surface again until the end of the season. May even count as a subversion, as it is the episode where Tara leaves Willow and Giles leaves for England.
- "I Was Made to Love You" is a fun, light-hearted episode just before Buffy's mother suddenly dies and the gang spends most of the rest of the season running for their lives.
- That episode is strangely sadistic though, since Buffy's mother's death happens at the end of the otherwise fun episode in question, instead of waiting until the next episode to do it and just leave "I Was Made to Love You" as fun filler. And of course, the next episode, "The Body" is completely morbid and freakin' TERRIFYING.
- Joss loves the subversion involved in ending a breather episode with a harsh return to the darkness of the main plot ... or even ending a happy moment with a cruel twist. Take "Seeing Red," where Willow and Tara are all giddily happy in their newly reignited relationship at the beginning of the episode, something many fans had been waiting for since their breakup, only to have Tara shot to death 40 minutes later.
- "Intervention". After the previous 2 episodes, the show needed an(other) episode featuring a sex robot.
- In Angel, the first half of Season 3 is a moderately dark arc involving the birth of Angel's son. Then we have "Provider", which includes moments between Wes and Fred, Gunn and Fred, Angel and Cordy, Cordy and Gunn, and especially Wes and Gunn.
- It's followed immediately by "Waiting in the Wings", where the crew attend a performance by a cursed ballet troupe just before the very dark arc dealing with Holtz's plan to kill Angel and kidnap his son.
- In Season 5, Cordelia's and Fred's deaths are separated by "Smile Time", which is this trope writ very large indeed.
- While less well known than "Smile Time", "The Girl in Question" is also a perfect fit for this trope. The episode was immediately before the show's extremely dark and depressing final two episodes. It featured, among other things, Angel and Spike's "arch nemesis" The Immortal, a decapitated demon's head held for ransom, and more than a few Ho Yay moments between the aforementioned vampires.
- Kamen Rider Ryuki had a couple, although it did introduce the Sixth Ranger to ORE Journal.
- Star Trek: Deep Space Nine did this regularly in the later seasons to break up the darkest and most complex storyline in the entire franchise: the Dominion War arc. Comedic episodes featuring the Ferengi were especially prominent. It should be noted, however, that Ferengi episodes were being done before the Dominion War as well.
- The last episode to air prior to the Dominion conquering Deep Space Nine seemed designed to lighten a mood that was about to get pretty bleak.
- Other examples that are placed in the middle of a string of arc episodes include the holosuite-centered "Badda Bing Badda Bang" (a heist caper in 1960s Las Vegas) and "Take Me Out to the Holosuite" (a baseball game versus a team of Vulcans).
- "In The Cards" provides a big change in pace to break the tension before the season finale, with Jake and Nog getting into all kinds of hijinks.
- "In the Pale Moonlight" - widely recognized as possibly the darkest episode in Trek canon - was immediately followed by "His Way", a romantic comedy episode explicitly written to get Odo and Kira together.
- Babylon 5 had a mix of Wham Episodes and Breather Episodes earlier on, but even the latter usually advanced some aspect of the overall series Arc, if only in B-plot. By the climax of the arc, they were rarer. They returned some in the fifth season, though they were not necessarily light or fluffy. For example, the fifth-season episode "Day Of The Dead," written by Neil Gaiman, was a completely stand-alone story, and a definite breather after the missteps of the Telepath plotline and before the Centauri War; it was not, however, simple fare.
- Since JMS didn't know if he'd get a fifth season, he packed two seasons' worth of the A plot into season 4, and season 5 was mostly made up of the leftover B plots.
- Xena: Warrior Princess employed this trope quite often, particularly when Xena and Gabrielle are each forced to kill each other's children in one particular episode.
- Homicide: Life on the Street had Season Five's very funny, self referential "The Documentary" placed between "Blood Wedding" and "Betrayal", two of the most emotionally wrenching episodes in the show's history.
- The episode "Boom Town" in the 2005 season of Doctor Who provided a much-needed break between the gritty darkness of "The Empty Child/The Doctor Dances" and the climactic "Bad Wolf/The Parting of the Ways".
- Despite "The Next Doctor" and "Planet of the Dead" having the subject matter of a man having missing identity due to a fugue state, and a race of aliens that turned a thriving world to dust, they were fun romps in comparison to the horrifying "The Waters of Mars" and David Tennant's tragic regeneration story The End of Time.
- Following all-out war in "The Sontaran Stratagem"/"The Poison Sky" and "The Doctor's Daughter" and before the nightmarish Library in "Silence in the Library"/"Forest of the Dead", we have a murder mystery parodying Agatha Christie's works. Attempted murder through cyanide has never been so hilarious!
- After the viewers start to come to turns with Rory's time-erasure in "Cold Blood" and the depression factor of Vincent van Gogh in "Vincent and the Doctor", we get "The Lodger", a nice funny episode where the Doctor pretends to be human and plays football rather well before the HSQ hits the fan in the finale "The Pandorica Opens"/"The Big Bang".
- Then for the first half of Series 6, we get the fun little pirate tale "The Curse of the Black Spot" wedged between the thrilling, terrifying and heart wrenching season premiere and the sad and scary "The Doctor's Wife". After Amy, Rory and the Doctor had their egos completely broken and their faith challenged in the second half, leading to the Doctor leaving Rory and Amy behind, we got "Closing Time", which got pretty scary, but nonetheless was far lighter hearted than the preceding episodes (and, incidentally, featured Craig from the previous year's Breather Episode). Although in that case, the Breather managed to finish slightly before the actual episode, with a scene at the end thrown in to remind the audience what was coming.
- After the rather bleak trio of episodes revolving around the death and resurrection of Owen, the Torchwood episode "Something Borrowed" featured Gwen trying to prevent her wedding to Rhys being ruined by an unexpected alien pregnancy. Cue a genuinely funny runaround as the shape-shifting alien's mommy appears at the service looking to retrieve her baby by tearing it out of Gwen's belly.
- CSI had the lighthearted Lower Deck/BottleEpisode "You Kill Me," about The Lab Rat Hodges running the other Lab Rats through elaborate (and absurd) murder scenarios as part of a CSI-themed board game he was creating. The previous episode featured the Put on a Bus departure of a main character, while the following episode concerned another main character breaking down after becoming addicted to prescription drugs.
- After the hiatus, Supernatural had a Something Completely Different episode called "Ghostfacers". It was meant to a light and silly little episode to give the fans a break before the last three episodes of the season. Fans literally scoffed until they actually saw the gore, the unhinged crazy and the massive angst-wallowing of those episodes.
- As "Monster Movie" was supposed to air between "Are You There, God..." and "In The Beginning" - but aired after "Metamorphosis" - it certainly counts as this. Fans generally loved it and it can be agreed that it was a lovely break from the increasingly unrelenting misery that Season Four episodes have so far inflicted on the boys. And therein lies the problem: Season Four was so angsty and the boys are so fucked up that it makes this episode unable to fit in anywhere, thus making it a complete standalone.
- It's also remarkable how most of the season 4 "Monster of the Week" episodes were incredibly goofy. First, there was "Monster Movie". Then "Yellow Fever" (Even though it had an extreme Mood Whiplash). Then "Wishful Thinking" with the suicidal teddy bear.
- There is usually at least one breather episode per season, where the show becomes ridiculously self-aware. See "Tall Tales" and "Hollywood Babylon", as well as those mentioned above. Although, this being Supernatural, it is hard to have a completely light-hearted episode.
- In season seven, there was Plucky Pennywhistles Magical Menagerie and Party on Garth as breather episodes. Except the former ended up angsty because Sam and Dean were actually happy for once [1] and the latter made everybody tear up because it addressed the possibility of Bobby's ghost hanging around.
- As "Monster Movie" was supposed to air between "Are You There, God..." and "In The Beginning" - but aired after "Metamorphosis" - it certainly counts as this. Fans generally loved it and it can be agreed that it was a lovely break from the increasingly unrelenting misery that Season Four episodes have so far inflicted on the boys. And therein lies the problem: Season Four was so angsty and the boys are so fucked up that it makes this episode unable to fit in anywhere, thus making it a complete standalone.
- Firefly made it a point to follow some of the more intense episodes with much lighter-hearted ones, such as following the tense, horror-themed episode "Bushwhacked" with the lighter swordfight-y episode "Shindig," or the violent and gunplay-heavy episode "War Stories" with the much more humorous caper episode "Trash."
- The X-Files fourth season is generally considered the darkest, what with Scully's cancer and all. Towards the end of the season the mood is thankfully lightened by "Small Potatoes." The more light-hearted, Monster of the Week episodes are definately welcome breaks in the show given how dark things start getting during the "mythology episodes" (episodes that further the over-arching storyline instead of telling a one-off story).
- A much lousier one comes in the middle of three excellent season 2 episodes: "Duane Barry"/"Ascension" (Holy shit! Scully's been abducted!) "3" (Hang on...Mulder wants to bang a vampire...) and "One Breath" (Holy shit! Scully's been returned and might die! What was "3" about again?)
- There were several times in almost every season in which the X-Files would suddenly shift from aliens, demons, ghosts, and civilization-threatening conspiracies to straight-up comedy and back again. "Jose Chung's 'From Outer Space'" is considered one of the best episodes of the entire series, despite being self-parody on every level possible (or maybe even because of it).
- Lost broke from the darkness of season 3 with "Tricia Tanaka is Dead".
- Semi-lampshaded by Hurley in the episode:
Hurley: Look, I don't know about you, but things have really sucked for me lately, and I could really use a victory. So let's get one, dude! Let's get this car started. Let's look death in the face and say: "Whatever, man!"
- Season 2 is filled with these, most notably (and least annoyingly) the episode centered on Bernard and Rose's backstory.
- Season 5's "Some Like It Hoth": a Miles flashback episode whose present day portion features he and Hurley bumming around.
- The Office had the amusing "Café Disco" episode towards the end of the fifth season to break up the Michael Scott Paper Company storyline and the (assumed) Pam/Jim baby storyline.
- Farscape had "Revenging Angel", which was mostly done in the style of a Looney Tunes cartoon, wedged between the two episodes dealing with the death of one of the Crichtons.
- In the midst of the dark and grim Ori storyline, SG-1 had "200", a Very Special Episode celebrating the 200th episode the show aired (coincidentally coinciding with Cam Mitchell's 200th trip through the 'gate, so they could have an excuse to give it that title.) Highlights of "200" include blatant Wizard of Oz references, zombie fighting, and self-referencing all around. Highlights of the episode before include savage murders and the Trust (again). Highlights of the next episode include genocide and presumed character death.
- Ronald D. Moore attempted do this once or twice with Battlestar Galactica. After nearly a dozen hours of the most dramatic and emotionally draining stories that the Sci Fi Channel had seen, the network pleaded with him to create a lighter, more humorous episode. That episode ended up being "Tigh Me Up, Tigh Me Down". While somewhat more schticky than any previous or following episode, it certainly didn't help the goal that Eddie Olmos himself took the reins as director.
- The writing team of Battlestar Galactica was notoriously incapable of producing such episodes. The third season episode "Taking a Break From All Your Worries" was another response to a plea from the network for a breather. It was originally intended to be a fun, light stand-alone episode concerning the establishment of a bar on the Galactica. what made it onto screen was an almost unbearably grimdark episode in which the B-plot involves the suicidally depressing dysfunction of several romantic relationships, while the A-plot covers the force-feeding, mock execution, and drug-induced torture of a major character. Fun!
- Star Trek: The Next Generation did this immediately after the climactic events of "The Best of Both Worlds, Part 2". Picard was rescued and cured of Borg assimilation, and rather than dive straight back into adventure of the week, he took some shore leave on Earth to recover, in the episode "Family". This was also incidentally the first episode in Star Trek history to feature no shots of the bridge of the Enterprise. (Unless you count animated episodes, in which case, TAS: The Slaver Weapon was the first. This was the second.)
- Of course, "Family" was originally meant to have a big science fiction plot as the focus. Instead, they made "Family" a breather episode and moved the sci-fi plot to its own episode, "Remember Me".
- The first four seasons of The Amazing Race had a non-elimination leg between the final elimination leg and the finale. Since there were no penalties given out to teams saved by the non-elimination for those seasons, most teams considered this a free leg.
- The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles had two comedic episodes "Barcelona: May 1917" and "Prague: August 1917" that were edited together in the DVD release as "Adventures in Espionage". "Barcelona" was directed by Monty Python's Terry Jones, and features young Indy getting caught up with a bunch of bumbling international spies. "Prague" fares worse, the whole episode is Indy's quest to...install a telephone.
- The Glee episode "Dream On" deals with how dreams don't always come true, and is by far the darkest episode in the first season, as it brutally forces wheelchair-bound Artie to accept that he'll most likely be paraplegic for the rest of his life. The next episode was a tribute to Lady Gaga and Kiss.
- Stargate Universe used "Faith" to give the audience a break after the political tension and space battles of "Space" and "Divided".
- Earlier, "Earth" was the first episode which did not involve an imminent threat to the survival of the crew. They then got right back on it with "Time".
- "Cloverdale" provided a mostly-humorous breather in the middle of a darker arc involving Chloe's transformation and Rush's control of the ship.
- The popular Power Rangers Wild Force episode "Forever Red", the franchise's 10th-anniversary celebration featuring (almost) all of the series' Red Rangers going on a stand-alone mission, was just after the end of the Animus arc, and is followed by a two-parter that kicks off the final story arc when Master Org returns.
- The Boy Meets World episode "Bee True" from season six was the first purely comedic episode after eight straight episodes with at least one dramatic plotline. In those eight episode the show dealt with themes such as death, grief, finding oneself, parental abandonment, parental responsibility, and premature birth. "Bee True" involved Cory and Shawn concocting a Zany Scheme to help Mr. Feeny win over Dean Bolander.
- According to Stephen Colbert, A Colbert Christmas was a breather episode for real life. After the intensity of the 2008 elections, this is quite believable.
Music
- "Walk of Life", by Dire Straits. "After all the violence and double talk, here's just a song in all the trouble and the strife."
- "A Warm Place" from The Downward Spiral, a calm instrumental sandwiched between the short, violent 'Big Man With A Gun' and the death-wish clatter of 'Eraser'.
- The Vienna Teng album Warm Strangers sandwiches "Passage", a haunting high-octane Tear Jerker with a bit of eerie thrown in for good measure, in between "Anna Rose", a lullaby that is probably the closest Vienna gets to Tastes Like Diabetes territory, and The Atheist Christmas Carol, a calm, soothing song (which, despite what the title suggests, is not an Author Tract).
Video Games
- Crisis Core features a breather mission. Right after a very dramatic point, where Zack has to fight and kill his mentor and best friend, then spends the rest of the cutscene crying and being comforted by Aerith, Zack is next seen on vacation in Costa Del Sol. He's then attacked by scuba-geared enemies, and has to fight them off with a beach umbrella in lieu of his BFS.
- The original Final Fantasy VII featured one as well, after Aeris dies at the end of disk one, the beginning of disk two immediately gives you a snowboarding minigame to lighten the mood.
- This was parodied on the Web Comic RPG World, where after a similar Wham! Episode, the heroes get involved in a butterfly catching contest, with the hero still Heroic BSODing.
- Chapter 8 of Final Fantasy XIII has Sazh and Vanille going to Cocoon's theme park, featuring an absolutely gorgeous FMV cutscene. Shortly after this, the shit hits the fan - Dajh reappears and just as quickly turns to crystal, Sazh finds out that Vanille is partly responsible for turning his son into a l'Cie, and by the end of the chapter both characters have tried to kill themselves.
- The actual Breather Chapter would be the tenth, where the crew (and the players) enjoy some leisurely Dungeon Crawling after the massive whams of chapter 9.
- After the intense emotional drama and Bittersweet Ending of Final Fantasy X, Final Fantasy X-2 may be considered a breather game, with its all-female cast, bouncier J-Pop soundtrack and more upbeat storyline.
- Episode 9 of Disgaea: Hour of Darkness could be considered one of these as it's one of the funniest episodes of the game place right after one of the series' biggest tear jerkers.
- The Hundred-Acre Wood, and later Atlantica, serve this purpose in the Kingdom Hearts series.
- Chapter 6 of Mother 3 is simply a walk in a field of flowers and a bunch of flashbacks. This is just after the battle-heavy, tower-climbing fifth chapter, and just before the boss-filled, massive seventh chapter.
- It's worth noting that it was a break only in gameplay; emotionally it is rather heavy.
- Though Planescape: Torment is not that combat-based a game, the Brothel Of Slaking Intellectual Lusts, and in fact most of the Clerk's Ward is basically combat-free, epitomized by a sequence in which your characters hang out with a bunch of sexy women, swap stories, solve mysteries, and discuss philosophy with them while pleasant music plays in the background. You will find that hours have passed since you last killed anything. And after that everything goes to hell. Literally. Twice.
- The chapter "Black Mesa East" in Half-Life 2 provides a welcome break between the long canal sequence ("Route Kanal" and "Water Hazard") and the zombie-filled Survival Horror slaughterfest "We Don't Go To Ravenholm".
- Chapters 12 and 13 of Super Robot Wars W don't advance the plot at all, but rather are two Full Metal Panic! Fumoffu-based comedy chapters. A New Game+ replaces them with two different, equally goofy chapters.
- The third case in Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney: Justice For All fits between the extremely heavy second case (where Phoenix's assistant is accused of murder) and the perhaps-heaviest-in-the-series fourth case (where his assistant is kidnapped, forcing Phoenix to defend someone he knows to be guilty.) The third case takes place at a circus, features an effeminate magician as defendant, and a clown and Ventriloquist Dummy as major witnesses. It's not particularly well liked as an installment.
- Also applies to the third case of the first game, which, aside from introducing two recurring characters, is a lot less plot relevant than the previous or subsequent cases.
- Arguably, Case 2 and 3 of Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney. Both introduce characters who will be important later, but little about either case has consequences in subsequent levels.
- Case 2 and 3 of Trials And Tribulations. The former introduces the new prosecutor and the latter revisits a defendent from the previous game, but both have little relevance to the overarching story arc.
- Case 3 is actually a subversion. Godot's inability to see the color red turns out to be an extremely dangerous piece of evidence during the last case.
- Averted in Ace Attorney Investigations - all 5 cases are somehow tied in to one smuggling ring, although the third (notice a pattern) has the most tenuous link.
- Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of <insert version> ends the main story on a very powerful and emotional note, wherein you die, and the last thing you see before the credits roll is your partner breaking down in tears. The first mission in the postgame arc? Playful hazing while you look for fruit.
- The Cardbridge area in Alice: Madness Returns is a peaceful, beautiful, enemy-free level composed entirely of jumping puzzles. It offers a break from the constant horrors of the previous stage and sets you up to be punched all the harder by the even worse shit in Queensland.
- Asura's Wrath, episode 10, which is basically an Onsen Episode where Asura rests up after his fight with Kalrow to get ready for his epic fight on the moon with his master Augus in episode 11.
- The iDOLM@STER 2 - Mami's route compared to the others. In fact, depending on the answers the producer gives them during their story scenes, it can be even more amusing.
Webcomics
- El Goonish Shive has a breather arc of sorts; after the intense Damien arc, the next story arc involved throwing Grace her first birthday party. However, as that arc took nearly a year to resolve and was stuffed to the gills with filler, it may have been too much of a breather from the main plot; in fact, you may have to think for a good five minutes to recall that there was a larger plot beyond people being turned into things.
- One could also consider the "New and Old Friends" arcs to be breather episodes after the "Sister" arc and the current "Bringing Silly Back" arcs to be
allmostly breathers following the very angst and action heavy "Sister II".- YMMV, considering the angst-heavy "Hammerchlorians" and the action-heavy "New and Old Flames".
- One could also consider the "New and Old Friends" arcs to be breather episodes after the "Sister" arc and the current "Bringing Silly Back" arcs to be
- Done frequently in Sluggy Freelance. One of the most notable examples is the "Oceans Unmoving" arc, which was fairly serious and even depressing by Sluggy Freelance standards. It's broken into two halves, however. After the first half, Pete spent an arc showing everyone not involved in the "Oceans Unmoving" story going about their daily lives, trying to earn money and arguing over videogames. Then he did another arc that was an extended parody of 28 Days Later. Then another arc parodying the Harry Potter franchise, before finally resuming the "Oceans Unmoving" story. Then there's the "Aylee" chapter (also one of Sluggy's more serious outings) which took a break in the middle of the climax so Torg could tell a silly story about Riff sawing people in half with dimensional portals.
- Most recently, an incredibly heavy moment with Riff discovering that Zoe is alive, but that her burns from the encounter with Oasis are so severe that she's been trapped in life-support ever since. Riff ends up resolved to find her and save her from the pain. This is followed by marooned villains Crushestro and Monicruel being rescued by Crushie's
ex-wife Chestro.
- Most recently, an incredibly heavy moment with Riff discovering that Zoe is alive, but that her burns from the encounter with Oasis are so severe that she's been trapped in life-support ever since. Riff ends up resolved to find her and save her from the pain. This is followed by marooned villains Crushestro and Monicruel being rescued by Crushie's
- Webcomic Ctrl+Alt+Del intersperses the story arcs with random stand-alone strips. For this trope in particular, Chef Brian.
- After an especially epic conclusion to a story arc, Homestuck went off on a tangent with the Midnight Crew intermission. Also a breather episode for the author, who needed to fix up his server before he could continue to the next arc.
- After two tiring battles with the big bad in Jix, the comic switches tracks and has a story about Lauren trying to get the alien androids living in her apartment to do chores.
- And after Jix's recent fight with the big bad's daughter, Lauren and Jix took a relaxing roadtrip to hunt down the remains of the big bad's daughter's ship before they reached Area 51.
- Voodoo Walrus recently broke the tension of a storyline that was going from bad to worse for the main characters by cutting to reoccurring femme fatale Mac, quite literally, getting off on the pair's misery.
- Several arcs in Schlock Mercenary. "Massively Parallel" in particular has three of the five sections (Credomar Command, High Olympus Command and Mallcop Command) devoted to largely safe and light-hearted activities for the various groups of Toughs, which provides a nice break from Barsoom Command which involves Schlock's team getting tangled in a government conspiracy to flush Lunesby out of the Luna computer systems, and provides a soft start for the insanely action-filled final section of the book, "Command and Conquer," where the team must rescue Tagon's father and KevynPrime from an angry mob boss.
- Most arcs that appear to be breathers, however, end up becoming charlie foxtrots in a hurry. Like Schlocktoberfest 2005, which started looking like a Beach Episode arc.
- Another relative breather would be the entire book "Longshoreman of the Apocolypse," which while occasionally violent had little relevance to the galaxy on the whole and rarely seemed exceptionally dangerous, a nice break from the past four books that alternated between government conspiracies, threats to the galaxy and character bloodbaths. So, of course, it also introduced a long-term threat to Galactic society as we know it (mere knowledge of Long-Gun's existence quickly creates unstable under-the-table Mutually Assured Destruction situation at "best", and as was found out later, played a major role in ending several preceding Galactic civilizations and was dubbed simply "end gun" by those who hid well enough and survived several of such extinctions).
- Gunnerkrigg Court has a few. Funny chapters are often thrown in between more serious ones.
Web Original
- After a long string of Wham Episodes, Lonelygirl15 had "Backyard Bikini Patrol", an episode devoted largely to characterization and Fan Service.
- After the heavy dramatic exposition in episodes 18 and 19, Unforgotten Realms made Episode 20, A Day in the Limelight with ROAMIN the paladin, watching him solve crimes in his... unique fashion.
- Entry #23 of Marble Hornets is the most brutally scary of the series, with J returning to the abandoned house and being teleported all over the place, hearing the horrible static, somehow ending up in the factory seen in #22, and actually meeting the Slender Man. Entry #24, by contrast, 'only' has the Paranoia Fuel of J's own house apparently making him disappear for hours at a time, which by the standards of the series is relatively calming.
- And again in the more recent entry #46 which returns to an only slightly lesser scary than that of #23. In it Jay breaks into Alex's house and comes in direct contact with Slenderman. This was a huge shock, considering the lack of frame splitting prior to his appearance. This was followed by Entry #47, which is entirely shot in daylight hours and involved nothing but talking.
- After the nasty emotional rollercoaster of the Olympics plot (which involved the deaths/resurrection of half the founding Titans, Troia having to make her children Dead for Real, and a Battle Royale With Cheese) and Ra's Al Ghul's Plague (involving a global plague so virulent it killed millions of people, had heroes dropping like flies, and almost killed Superman), JLA Watchtower / DC Nation followed it up with a rather silly "Annual Chili Cookoff" plotline set at Warrior's bar.
- This Very Wiki's True Art page consists mainly of huge Mind Screw, after a little Mind Screw, the page immediately cuts back and offers an explanation of what True Art can be before resuming the Mind Screw.
- Atop the Fourth Wall has fairly serious story arcs, with the bulk of the plot generally taking place after the funny review. After major events, Linkara tends to have a few episodes with no story (or very little), which are just the funny review, with maybe a bit of foreshadowing or a more dramatic post-credits scene.
- One week in February, The Nostalgia Critic reviewed Patch Adams and showed it for the disrespectful, glurgey, disgustingly uncomfortable mess it was. The very next week, he did an episode on Ponyo, having fun with the adorable charm of the movie.
- Warning! Readers Advisory has had a couple--one to fill a slot on the schedule that was delayed due to some technical difficulties, and one as a regular breather after a handful of plot-heavy episodes that came before.
Western Animation
- Avatar: The Last Airbender had the light-hearted character vignette episode "Tales of Ba Sing Se" right after a very dark and dramatic episode that changed the perception of the "haven" of Ba Sing Se. Then after the dark depressing "Lake Laogai" episode is "The Earth King" where the Gaang finally overthrows the Dai Li, subverted in that it is Too Good to Last. Similarly, "Nightmares & Daydreams" was (for the most part) a breather between the quite scary and grim "The Puppetmaster" and the "Day of Black Sun" two-parter.
- The second half of the third season does this again with "The Ember Island Players", a humorous, fandom-related recap of the entire series right before the 4-part series finale.
- This was a bit of a subversion though because the play ended up having a Downer Ending.
- Of course it was a Downer Ending. It was directed by someone from the Fire Nation. For him and everyone else (expect the Gaang), it was Happily Ever After.
- The second half of the third season does this again with "The Ember Island Players", a humorous, fandom-related recap of the entire series right before the 4-part series finale.
- The first four seasons of Teen Titans each have an off-the-wall comedy just before the season finale, all of which are varying degrees of dark.
- On a larger level, Season Three was almost a breather arc, seeing as it was a fairly lighthearted storyline about Cyborg's escalating enmity with Large Ham Diabolical Mastermind Brother Blood, sandwiched between the (dark) Terra arc and the (really dark) Raven arc.
- The fact that they had to make Brother Blood a large ham to give viewers a breather just shows off how nasty Slade and Trigon are.
- On a larger level, Season Three was almost a breather arc, seeing as it was a fairly lighthearted storyline about Cyborg's escalating enmity with Large Ham Diabolical Mastermind Brother Blood, sandwiched between the (dark) Terra arc and the (really dark) Raven arc.
- Danny Phantom is a blend of comedy and drama, but after the heavy handed "Reign Storm" dealt with a number of story arcs, Character Development, and continuity, the next episode was the lighthearted (possibly THE most lighthearted of the series) "Identity Crisis" which is played for laughs from start to finish. There is also "The Ultimate Enemy" which was just fearsome (and a fan favorite). After that episode aired, viewers got the lighthearted and cutesy Christmas Episode.
- The long and uncharacteristically dark "Transwarped" season premiere in Transformers Animated was immediately followed by the lighthearted antics of the Constructicons and a wacky one-shot character in "Three's a Crowd". Then "Where Is Thy Sting" took us right back to dark again.
- At the end of its second season, Justice League broke up the tense Joker episode "Wild Cards" and the Grand Finale "Starcrossed" with "Comfort And Joy," a completely hartwarming story that show how each of the League members spends Christmas.
- The late Season Two episode of Gargoyles, "Vengeance", which has the major plot of Wolf teaming up with his long-dead ancestor Hakon and hunting Goliath, had the minor plot of a schlub named Vinnie who'd lost a lot of jobs as a security guard thanks to gargoyles and seeking them for revenge. He had a BFG built and finally shot Goliath in the face. With a cream pie. And said that they were even now. This and the episode involving the three youngest males competing over Angela were in between much more serious episodes.
- The relatively light-hearted "Showtime" was sandwiched between the scary-loaded "Scarecrow" and "Psychocrypt" on Galaxy Rangers.
- Cute and happy Nicktoon ChalkZone is usually made up of cute and happy episodes. Then came "Double Trouble", which was uh...to be blunt, not sugary AT ALL. It makes you forget that you're actually watching Chalkzone. After that episode, we get even more happy fun cuteness.
- Sonic Sat AM had two of them both consisted of two shorts rather than a full episode, the show had a very dark theme most episodes were about the characters saving or attempting to save others from Dr. Robotnik or uncovering clues from the past while trying to avoid being caught by Robotnik, in the first of these irregular episodes involves Antoine being kicked out of the Freedom Fighters and joining a gang of biker hyenas the second short involved Sonic telling ghost stories to Tails and Antoine and they believe the ghost exists, the second one involves Sonic's house being destroyed during a snowstorm and moving in with Antoine which drives him nuts and the second segment involved one of Rotor's robots falling in love with Antoine and stalking him.
- Episode 10 of Sym-Bionic Titan is a teen romantic comedy set between a Tear Jerker episode and a particualrly violent and intense one.
- ReBoot's episode Game Over is a subversion. It appears to give the main characters a break from Megabyte's invasion and Enzo can play the games without having to worry about getting ambushed when they end. Then he loses an eye - and the game.
- Regular Show has "My Mom", the first episode in which nothing particularly wild or crazy happens — it's mostly just Muscle Man teasing Mordecai and Rigby, who are annoyed by his antics. Keep in mind this is a series whose first episode included a magical keyboard that transported everyone to the Moon where they fought an Eldritch Abomination.
- A better example is "See You There". It involves a birthday party with just a few hijinks by the end.
- On Generator Rex, "Badlands" was a lighthearted episode pitting the eponymous character against a hammy Card-Carrying Villain, set between an episode revealing a previously-unknown chunk of Rex's backstory and the serious Season Finale.
- The second season of My Little Pony Friendship Is Magic started with Discord emotionally breaking the mane cast and coming dangerously close to conquering Equestria before finally being beaten. This is followed by the surprisingly frightening "Lesson Zero" before we finally get a let up from the fearsome with "Luna Eclipsed" (which was, surprisingly, the Halloween Episode of all things), but still dealt with the relatively serious matter of Princess Luna struggling to earn her subject's respect back after her stint as Nightmare Moon. It isn't until "Sisterhooves Social" that we finally get a completely mundane episode centering around Rarity's dealing with her little sister Sweetie Belle, followed by another episode centering on Applebloom.
- "Not Without My Anus" was supposed to be a breather episode sandwiched within the South Park two-parter "Carman's Mom is a Dirty Slut". However, the fact that it came as an April Fools' Day prank after a season-ending Cliff Hanger made this anything but a breather to a great many infuriated fans. The next episode to air on April 1, Season 13's "Eat, Pray, Queef", not only lampshaded this, but was anything but a breather.
- The Futurama Season 7 finale "Reincarnation" is a playful cool-down after the much more dramatic "Overclockwise" that preceded it.
- The Family Guy episode "Screams Of Silence: The Story of Brenda Q." was a Darker and Edgier Very Special Episode about Domestic Abuse. The next episode was about Stewie driving and crashing Brian's car.
- ↑ If your fanbase cries because the main characters are happy for once, then you have a seriously angst heavy show.