The preservation of ad libs, improvisations, and the occasional accident or mistimed what-have-you for dramatic or comic effect, sometimes at the cost of continuity. These are often some of the most memorable scenes, for better or for worse, due to their spontaneity. Differs slightly from attaching Hilarious Outtakes to the ends of shows. Related to No Fourth Wall. See also Rule of Funny, Rule of Cool. See also The Show Must Go On, Studio Chatter, Good Bad Bugs. Compare: Contrast Blooper. See also Woolseyism.
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| - The preservation of ad libs, improvisations, and the occasional accident or mistimed what-have-you for dramatic or comic effect, sometimes at the cost of continuity. These are often some of the most memorable scenes, for better or for worse, due to their spontaneity. Differs slightly from attaching Hilarious Outtakes to the ends of shows. Related to No Fourth Wall. See also Rule of Funny, Rule of Cool. See also The Show Must Go On, Studio Chatter, Good Bad Bugs. Compare: Contrast Blooper. See also Woolseyism.
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| - The preservation of ad libs, improvisations, and the occasional accident or mistimed what-have-you for dramatic or comic effect, sometimes at the cost of continuity. These are often some of the most memorable scenes, for better or for worse, due to their spontaneity. Differs slightly from attaching Hilarious Outtakes to the ends of shows. Related to No Fourth Wall. See also Rule of Funny, Rule of Cool. Not to be confused with Enforced Method Acting, when something unexpected is deliberately done to an actor in order to elicit a realistic response, or Improv, where there is very little or no script at all and the actors are making up large chunks as they go along. See also The Show Must Go On, Studio Chatter, Good Bad Bugs. Compare:
* Ascended Fanon: Where Fanon becomes Canon
* Ascended Meme: Where a meme from fanon is upgraded to canon.
* Ascended Glitch: Like Thrown It In, but occurs after the release of the work.
* Harpo Does Something Funny: Invoking this by leaving gaps in the script for the actors to throw stuff in.
* Left It In: When it's explicitly said on camera that something will be cut from the final product... and it's not.
* Official Fan Submitted Content: Asking fans for stuff to throw in. Contrast Blooper. See also Woolseyism. Examples of Throw It In include:
* Advertising
* Animated Film
* Anime and Manga
* Art
* Fan Works
* Film
* Literature
* Live Action TV
* Music
* Puppet Shows
* Radio
* Theatre
* Video Games
* Web Comics
* Web Original
* Western Animation
* Real Life
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