Many parodies take things apart to laugh with the work and the fans. Malice is almost never intended to the source, just good fun.
Affectionate Parodies are generally done by fans (and sometimes creators) of the source material. Don't presume, however, that because of this, the Affectionate Parody can't be harsh; ultimately, it can be even more cutting than usual, because as devotees of the thing parodied, the creators know exactly where its faults, flaws, and weak points are (and also because, as genuine lovers of the source material, the parodists can be said to enjoy N-Word Privileges of a sort). Unfortunately, if the jokes are mean-spirited enough about their subjects in general, fans might mistake the creators for hating the subjects and, well, it can lead to Misaimed Fandom.
They often function as both a send-up of a genre and an honest member of it. Generally, there's some kind of underlying plot, a twisted version of a stock tale, and actual characters, even if they're swathed in cliches like a mummy in wrappings. Some of them can lean more toward the "Affectionate" than the "Parody" and just seem like more light-hearted versions of the usual with maybe some Lampshade Hanging. Very often, affectionate parodies are based on humoring as many tropes typical of the genre as possible, and can easily be classified as Troperiffic.
Often times, being parodied is a sign of doing something right. Being parodied by well known artists like Weird Al or South Park means that you've made something big, and is the price of making a hit. When the parody is well received by the creator of the original, then this is Approval of God.
Many a comedy Fan Fic has used this.
See also Satire/Parody/Pastiche and Adam Westing, where the original actor joins in the fun. If an Affectionate Parody is so loving that the parody aspect falls out, it is an Indecisive Parody, and may be a sign that the creators are about to make a Decon-Recon Switch.
Compare Take That!, where the parody / reference is a lot less affectionate.
Contrast Deconstructive Parody.
Example subpages
- Anime and Manga
- Comic Books
- Fan Works
- Films Live-Action
- Literature
- Live-Action TV
- Music
- Theater
- Video Games
- Web Comics
- Web Original
- Western Animation
- This commercial
spoofs kaiju. Ultraman in particular. Also '80s (neo-classical) power metal.
- This Irn Bru advert
spoofs the flying sequence from Christmas classic The Snowman. Showing a variety of Scottish landmarks instead of ones from the South East of England and the music is a parody version of Walking in the Air.
- The 2015 San Francisco Giants' parody of the Full House opening, aptly named Full Clubhouse. Brandon Crawford rocking his long hair and strumming a guitar like Uncle Jesse, Hunter Pence polishing his scooter, and Jeremy Affeldt's shit-eating grin must be seen to be believed.
- Calvin and Hobbes: Calvin's alter egos are often used to spoof their various genres. Tracer Bullet covers Film Noir, Spaceman Spiff is a parody of Sci-fi adventure stuff like Flash Gordon, and Stupendous Man... well, guess. Occasionally, the comics Calvin was actually reading would be used to give a not-so-affectionate critique of the ultraviolent Dark Age of Comic Books.
- Knights of the Dinner Table is essentially a good-natured sendup of tabletop gamer culture. The creators even produced their own licensed verion of the 1st Edition AD&D rules, Hackmaster.
- Chicken Run is a stop motion animated version of The Great Escape and other prisoner-of-war escape movies. Albeit with a happier ending.
- Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs parodied disaster films.
- Shark Tale is an affectionate parody of gangster films, which probably helps in that they feature Robert de Niro as the Don, and he played Vito in the second Godfather movie.
- South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut is a parody of musicals and Disney films. Odd combination but it surprisingly works.
- Kung Fu Panda is an affectionate parody of Wuxia films.
- Rango is an affectionate parody of the Spaghetti Western.
- Hotel Transylvania is an affectionate parody of Universal Horror and vampire movies.
- Igor is an affectionate parody of Universal Horror and the Frankenstein movies in particular.
- The "I'll Make a Man Out of You" sequence in Mulan can be seen as an affectionate parody of a Boot Camp Episode.
- Surf's Up parodies the mockumentary.
- The Spongebob Movie Sponge Out Of Water is one of Pirate movies, the post-apocalyptic genre, and the Superhero blockbuster.
- The LEGO Movie frequently (though not completely) parodies summer blockbuster movies. The fact that Everything's Built with LEGO helps, as even the most spectacular explosions and overloaded action sequences end up sillier as a result.
- It would probably be easier to list the things The LEGO Batman Movie doesn't parody about the Dark Knight. His over-the-top edginess, his relationship with The Joker literally being played like a romance, his Informed Loner tendancies, you name it. They even take some affectionate shots at the nature of the live action Batman films themselves, and imply every incarnation of Batman was just a different phase he went through.
- America's Most Haunted parodies Paranormal Investigation television shows such as Ghost Hunters, Ghost Adventures, and Destination Truth. The Video Mode, "Flippy Ghost," is a parody ofFlappy Bird.
- Sakura Hirota has done parody gimmicks of Command Bolshoi, Aja Kong, The World Famous Kana, Stan Hansen, Kinnikuman, Bull Nakano, Kyusei Ninja Ranmaru, Lady Gaga, Mayumi Ozaki, Ayako Hamada, The Undertaker, Toshi Uematsu, GAMI and Akira Maeda, among others.
- Ebessan has also done Hansen as well as The Great Kabuki, Miracle Man, Gamma, Abdullah the Butcher(eventually endorsed by the real thing at All Japan's excite series), Satoshi Kojima, Jushin Thunder Liger, Cactus Jack(another real thing endorsement at ROH's third anniversary), Goldberg, Y2P 160kg(who approved at Zero 1 land II), Jumbo Tsuruta, Rey Misterio, Kurt Angle, Killer Khan, El Blazer(endorsed in VKF), Akebono, Tarzan Goto, Bret Hart, Dump Matsumoto, Tiger Jeet Singh, Ultimate Warrior, Kodo Fuyuki and probably a few more we've overlooked.
- WWE wrestler Gregory Helms's former character, The Hurricane, was an Affectionate Parody of Superheroes, especially Superman and the Adam West Batman. His character previous to that was an Affectionate Parody of comic-book fanboys, as he trotted out his encyclopedic knowledge of the Green Lantern and compared situations from the comic to everything he came across in his wrestling career (in fact, his costume as Hurricane was heavily influenced by the costume worn by Kyle Rayner as the Green Lantern).
- In 2005, Shocker, Máscara Mágica, and El Terrible held a competition in mockery of competition based reality shows that had the same format as WWE's Million Dollar Tough Enough called "Guapos University," in which they searched for a new member of their CMLL group, Los Guapos.
- The LayCool characters were affectionate parodies of the Alpha Bitch with them being fashion obsessed, finishing each other's sentences, their own Buffy Speak catchphrases and a whole lotta Les Yay. And they were still some of the best written heels on Smackdown.
- Dragon Gate turned CZW wrestler Rich Swann into Swann Hanson, a parody of Stan Hansen. For the record, Stan is a "smash mouth" striker while Swann is a high flying garbage wrestler.
- Southpaw Regional Wrestling is a series of short clips made by WWE talent depicting a fake wrestling territory from the mid-late 80's, complete with low production values, bad costumes, Leave the Camera Running moments, and adverts for their upcoming show at a tiny venue.
- The Stan Freberg Show: Stan Freberg recorded several Affectionate Parodies of Dragnet, including "St. George and the Dragonet" and "Little Blue Riding Hood" ("only the color of the hood has been changed to prevent an investigation"). The supposed Dragnet Catch-Phrase "just the facts, ma'am" originated in these parodies.
- I'm Sorry I'll Read That Again always had an extended sketch at the end of each episode, presented as the Prune Play Of The Week. These were often affectionate parodies of plays, books, genres, or whatever was on TV at the time. Their parody of Star Trek: The Original Series is quite memorable, mostly for being a parody of something still well-known.
Spock: Illogical, captain. Allow me to raise my eyebrow to signify how ridiculous that is.
Announcer: See him! See him raise the incredible eyebrow!
Spock: And now...the other eyebrow. [fanfare]
Announcer: The other eyebrow! Oh, the talent! Oh, the joy!
Spock: And now... [drumroll]... both eyebrows at once! [fanfare]
Announcer: Fantastic! Magnificent! - In and Out of the Kitchen is a parody of lifestyle cookery shows.
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Frank Caliendo's sports impersonations are between this and Indecisive Parody.
- The Pokéthulhu roleplaying game is an arguably affectionate but very tongue in cheek cross-parody of, guess what, Pokémon and the Cthulhu Mythos.
- Depending on who you ask, the Munchkin roleplaying game series is either an affectionate parody or a Take That! at the selfish, loot-grubbing behavior of some gamers. Though it very likely is both.
- The game Illuminati is one of conspiracy theories.
- Rocketmen is an affectionate parody of Buck Rogers, and the Raygun Gothic genre.
- At Universal Studios:
- Disaster! was a tongue-in-cheek parody of typical disaster/action movie cliches.
- Dudley Do-Right's Ripsaw Falls contains numerous parodies of classic Disneyland attractions.
- The Funtastic World of Hanna-Barbera has a "Coney Skyland" park in the Jetsons scene, a clear parody of "Coney Island".
- "The Universe & You" posters at Men In Black: Alien Attack are purposely designed to mimic the retro Disneyland posters.
- Elements of the Shrek 4-D queue very blatantly parody Disney.
- Krustyland in The Simpsons Ride, which parodies not only the Disney Theme Parks but SeaWorld, Six Flags and Universal themselves.
- Homestar Runner features many affectionate parodies in its various cartoons, mostly of things from the creators' childhoods. A prime example would be Cheat Commandos, a parody of merchandise-driven kids' TV shows such as G.I. Joe.
- Barbie: Life in the Dreamhouse serves as an Affectionate Parody of the entire Barbie franchise, poking fun at everything from her her ridiculous job history to the fact that she's remained vaguely twenty-ish for over fifty years.
- Wronchi Animation
has uploaded a series of The Dota 2 Reporter videos that parodies the entire gameplay of Dota 2 and even lampshades any Reality Is Unrealistic moments with "You'll just have to accept this and move on".
- Resident Evil Musicals has every character from the Resident Evil franchise dumbed down and singing to musicals. It features a side-series called Resident Evil: Survivor which is both an affectionate parody of the Survivor reality show and Resident Evil itself.
- The 30 Second Bunnies Theatre pokes fun at movies by reenacting them in thirty seconds with cartoon bunnies. Most of the time these are slasher movies.
- PONY.MOV. The series' over-the-top art style and Crosses the Line Twice sense of humor may suggest the opposite kind of parody, but its creator has stated on his Tumblr blog that he's a legitimate fan of the show it makes fun of.
- The Ducktalez Animations make fun of Resident Evil (episode 2), Dragon Ball Z (episode 3), The Matrix, The Iron Giant (episode 5), The Dark Knight (episode 6), the Terminator series, and more.
- Mystery Skulls Animated is an affectionate sending up of Scooby-Doo with the supernatural investigator kids, their dog and their van obviously inspired by the Scooby gang. The Mystery Skulls gang is quickly proven to be darker and more tragic however maintains affectionate references to the longstanding franchise.
- Space Stallions
is an affectionate parody of cartoons from the '80s and late '70s such as He-Man and the Masters of the Universe (1983), She-Ra: Princess of Power, Thunder Cats, SilverHawks and Battle of the Planets.
- COPS: Skyrim is one of Cops.
- If the Emperor Had a Text-to-Speech Device is a satiric take on Warhammer 40,000 which pokes plenty of fun at the more ridiculous aspects, but is nonetheless respectful and as accurate as possible to the source material. As the author himself says on the latter, In TTS, "everything is canon (except Malal)"
- FreedomToons parodies some people whom its creator Seamus Coughlin is explicitly a supporter of.
Dear Ben Shapiro, I'm sorry for making another video about you. Please don't melt me with your laser vision. I'm actually a huge fan.



