Power Suit Monkey
The tendency for animals to outperform their human coworkers in comedies. Most often takes the form of a gorilla or chimpanzee in a business suit who quickly climbs the corporate ladder after being hired. Power Suit Monkey can come in a few flavors:
Type One: Said monkey actually is competent, at least according to the other character's Lampshading. Type one's competence is normally contrasted to another human character's incompetence for laughs. Type one never speaks, and other than being a part of the scenery, typically doesn't interact with the human characters physically.
Type Two: This is when the monkey acts just like a typical monkey would, but the work environment is so atrocious to begin with this behavior actually lands the monkey promotions and praise from his coworkers. Unlike Type one monkeys, Type twos are free to interact with their coworkers, usually in the form of random tantrums, face-scratching, and the classic poo throwing.
Type Three: Type three monkeys are practically human in all but species. Type threes typically form rivalries with the Protagonist, but are otherwise portrayed as popular with the rest of the characters. While you are more likely to see a Type three courting the office hotty or chatting it up with the fellas at the water cooler, they do sometimes slip back into Type two territory, usually when tempted by a banana.
Not to be confused with a Monkey in Power Armor.
Comics
Films
- In The Flintstones movie, there is a monkey in fred and Barney's work, and he is, after Barney, the smartest of the employees!
Literature
- In the Discworld books, there is an orangutan librarian. He is not a monkey.
- As a matter of fact, the Librarian used to be a wizard, working in Unseen University's library until one of the books turned him into an ape. He's been transformed for so long that most people new to the series assume he's this trope, and even his fellow wizards have trouble remembering that he used to be human.
Live Action TV
- Not the Nine O'Clock News: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=beCYGm1vMJ0
- Syfy Channel has this commercial.
- The Mighty Boosh has Bollo, a type three.
- Obscure nineties British sitcom Nightingales (three nightwatchmen in an office building whiling the time away) had Richard Oblong, a gorilla who joined the team for an episode. Type 1 or 2.
Music
- Jonathan Coulton's "Code Monkey" describes a literal Type Three monkey who sings in Hulk Speak.
Web Comics
- Judy from Doctor McNinja counts as a type one.
- In Champions Online, we have Dr Silverback, genius scientist, celebrity, superhero contact... and Gorilla.
Western Animation
- Futurama: Farnsworth comes up with a hat that makes a monkey intelligent. This results in a Type 3 rival for Fry.