Career Killers

This is a disambiguation page. Career Killer can refer to several things depending on the context:

If you're looking for a character who has made a career out of killing people, see

If you're looking for something that can kill your career, we have multiple tropes for that

For writers, artists, producers, etc., a "Career Killer" is a work that ends up being more harmful than helpful to their careers:

  • Creator Killer: a work which threatens the viability or harms the reputation of its writer(s) or producer(s).
  • Franchise Killer: a work within a long - running franchise that destroys hopes for further sequels.
  • Genre Killer: a work that results in an entire subgenre falling out of fashion.
  • Ink Stain Adaptation: a work within a long-running franchise that colors the public perception of the franchise as a whole.
  • Star-Derailing Role: a work that damages the reputation of performers taking part in it.

Taking a new job can also destroy a career:

  • George Jetson Job Security: a job that comes with a boss who likes to fire people for the most minor mistake.
  • Kicked Upstairs: a character is deliberately promoted to a high-ranking but unimportant role, in order to remove them from their current, more important role.
  • Promoted to Scapegoat: a character is deliberately promoted to a seemingly important role, in order to use them as The Scapegoat.
  • Reassigned to Antarctica: a reassignment to a remote location intended as a punishment or to simply get rid of a character.

For other things that destroy characters' careers in-universe, you might be interested in:

Of course, there are also career moves that can get someone killed

  • Retirony: A Mauve Shirt who has held a dangerous job for many years dies within days of their retirement date.
  • Uriah Gambit: a character is deliberately given a particularly dangerous reassignment in hopes they won't come back.
    This article is issued from Allthetropes. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.