. . . . "A clich\u00E9 is a phrase, motif, trope, or other element within an artistic work that has become common enough to be seen as predictable, tired, overused, and generally unfavorable. Such items tend to break Willing Suspension of Disbelief by calling attention to the lack of creativity on the part of the creator. This is very subjective and dependent on the consumer's culture and knowledge level: Some American buying their very first issue of a Japanese Manga might find it new and exciting, but in the home country of Japan, the same manga may be considered old and tired. A person playing their first Role Playing Game might not realize the Mysterious Waif is far from original. Even then, just through Popcultural Osmosis or a sort of \"sixth sense\", people not familiar with the clich\u00E9 might be able to spot it as such. In spite of the negative stigma, many clich\u00E9s are fully accepted by the audience so long as they are specifically pointed out. Even then, it doesn't change the fact that it's present; just because a detective comments on how bad mystery novels have the butler revealed as the murderer doesn't change the fact that, well, The Butler Did It. There are also circumstances under which clich\u00E9s are expected. To quote Crash Davis from Bull Durham: Even without Lampshade Hanging, the Lowest Common Denominator will still lap up works considered heavily clich\u00E9 for the same reason as something formulaic works: because of its familiarity. Many people seek brainless entertainment as its own reward and introducing elements requiring deep thought usually just alienates the average person. The sheer number of Police Procedurals, Medical Dramas, and Romance Novels with summaries that are practically interchangeable exist because people buy them anyway. A lot of Executive Meddling aims to make a work more clich\u00E9 simply as a way of appealing to broader audiences. The term clich\u00E9 is also sometimes used to refer to a verbal meme. This usage is almost exclusively reserved for old folk sayings. Expressions such as \"the early bird gets the worm\" and \"raining cats and dogs\" are examples. The name clich\u00E9 dates back to older printing presses. When each letter had to be individually set, a common phrase would often be cast as a single block piece called a clich\u00E9. Such ease of use ended up with authors over-utilizing them to save on costs. The term came to mean the readily available phrase itself before broadening to include any overused element. See also: \n* Clich\u00E9 Storm - When a work has numerous tropes with a definite pattern. \n* Discredited Trope - Trope becomes a clich\u00E9. \n* Discredited Meme - Meme becomes overused. \n* Dead Horse Trope - Period of trope life cycle when nobody uses a trope seriously anymore. \n* Dead Unicorn Trope - The clich\u00E9 is never used seriously, but it never was played straight in the first place. \n* Grandfather Clause - Normally Discredited Trope or Dead Horse Trope can be played straight in a work which was made when the trope was cool. \n* Necessary Weasel - Illogical trope is a building block of a genre. \n* Seinfeld Is Unfunny - Quantity or quality of imitators make the work they're based on age badly. \n* Trope Overdosed and Overdosed Tropes \n* Troperiffic - When a work has fun with playing numerous tropes with a definite pattern."@en . . . . . . . "A clich\u00E9 is a phrase, motif, trope, or other element within an artistic work that has become common enough to be seen as predictable, tired, overused, and generally unfavorable. Such items tend to break Willing Suspension of Disbelief by calling attention to the lack of creativity on the part of the creator. There are also circumstances under which clich\u00E9s are expected. To quote Crash Davis from Bull Durham: See also:"@en . . . "Cliche"@en . . .