Outlast 2 tv tropes
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May the thunderous power from the garments of these holy, delicate maidens strike down upon you with great vengeance and furious anger, shattering your loathsome impurity and returning you from whence you came! O, evil spirit born of those drifting between heaven and earth.
#OUTLAST 2 TV TROPES SERIES#
Sprint has a series of 2013 ads where James Earl Jones and Malcolm McDowell give dramatic readings of Facebook activity, text messaging, and the like - including a slang-filled conversation between two teenage girls.The Blaxploitation spoof I'm Gonna Git You Sucka had a TV ad playing it up like a Merchant-Ivory motion picture an upper-class-British-accented narrator reads it as "I Am Going To Get You, Sucker".The UK digital radio station Planet Rock has a charmer: "If music be the food of love. Rock radio stations seem to get this a lot.
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I put that shit on everything!" The brand frequently uses innocuous little old ladies as spokespersons for the tag line, but Her Royal Majesty is probably a crowning example.
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Mixing up the funkiest lines from every verse, even. A Canadian commercial for Nortel had, while the music for the song played in the background and was apparently not heard by the characters, a Nortel executive calling a press conference.and his speech being the lyrics of " Come Together".T-Mobile had a commercial in which a couple calls up a librarian when they have a dispute about the lyrics to " Pour Some Sugar On Me." Cue librarian, in an absolutely deadpan voice, reciting, "Pour some sugar on me.An elderly gentleman saying, " With a rebel yell, she cried 'More! More! More!'") A local radio station had people reading out the lyrics of pop songs, sometimes ironic to the situation, other times just not what you expect. There was a series of commercials for a classic-rock radio station which included unlikely people (a very old man, a nun, a school teacher) reading rock lyrics deadpan.Suggesting a "technical", "professional", or obscure foreign term, followed by slang or profanity ("Your engine is what we in the business describe as 'completely screwed'." "He's what Freud used to call 'spooky'." "As the French say, you, my friend, are le utter cock.") or following a lengthy formal or descriptive analysis.A quote misattribution ("In the words of the great Oscar Wilde, STFU n00b").Theres a certain humor in playing with different levels of language use, and the common trick is to mix "sophisticated" language (such as Spock Speak, Antiquated Linguistics, Sesquipedalian Loquaciousness, Gratuitous Foreign Language, or extremely formal Received Pronunciation British) with "unsophisticated" language (such as the Cluster F-Bomb, Totally Radical, or Buffy Speak), with the necessary awkwardness on both sides. When one suddenly uses a register, dialect, or vocabulary at a significant distance from that previously employed, the effect is weird. Use and context establish tone, with an expectation for its continuation.