Rake Take

  • Main
  • All Subpages
  • Create New


    Common in cartoons, an innocuous-looking rake (or hoe, or shovel...) is lying on the ground. A character steps on it the wrong way and gets a face full of the stick part. Ouch.

    Obviously Truth in Television for anyone who tried that. In real life, however, it usually results in a nosebleed or, if bad enough, a trip to the emergency room - Looney Tunes jokes notwithstanding. And if an actual rake fails to rise and smack you, it may instead hurt your foot.

    Examples of Rake Take include:

    Film

    Literature

    • A humorous aside in the Ciaphas Cain novel The Traitor's Hand notes a group of monks injuring themselves stepping on discarded gardening tools while fleeing from an unexpectedly-landing shuttlecraft. Seems even in the 41st millennium, this joke still happens.

    Live Action TV

    • Happens to the Skipper on the Gilligan's Island episode "Waiting for Watubi"; the "rake" was made of bamboo and coconuts.
    • Happens to Jack a couple of times on Three's Company.
    • On One Thousand Ways to Die, one young woman who gardened as a hobby died of suffocation by stepping on a rake with a zucchini in her mouth as she prepared for a date.
    • In The Late Show with David Letterman's Top Ten List of the most dangerous toys (from November 1997), Number 8 was "'Ouch!' The Step-On-A-Rake Game".

    Newspaper Comics

    Other

    Video Games

    Web Comics

    Torg (thinking): Alone, surrounded by vampires. My only hope is to dive for the rake by my feet, breaking the shaft into a wooden stake. But how am I going to find it in this mist?

    • WAP!*

    Western Animation

    Sideshow Bob: Rakes! My old arch enemy...
    Bart: I thought I was your arch enemy?
    Sideshow Bob: I have a life outside of you, you know.

    • In Ice Age, Sid the sloth walks on something in the abandoned human camp and gets whacked in the face.
    • Monster Allergy has it with Bombo in the opening theme of season 1.
      This article is issued from Allthetropes. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.