Miss Teschmacher: Get out!
Lex Luthor: (chuckling) Before that!
A Stock Phrase delivered if one character has really pissed another character off. They might just mean out of the room, but may even mean "Get out of my house" or there may even be an implied "I never want to see you again" (speaking of stock phrases). Often followed by, "And stay out!" (a third stock phrase). In a more formal organizational setting like the military, the term used can be "Dismissed," spoken by a senior officer who is through with the subordinate causing the irritation, with the sharpness of the tone conveying how much trouble that person is in.
Any attempts to reason with the character who has made this demand will simply get them to restate it, more forcefully and usually shouting, or while on the brink of tears. Oh, and expect a few insults (or possibly items of furniture) to be thrown if the target of the ultimatum is stubborn or has really blown it. Usually a line spoken by a very angry Love Interest, pissed off friends and allies have been known to use it as well. Sometimes, however, a character will not give in to the ultimatum, sometimes taking the demand, insults, and the thrown objects as a declaration of war, a situation which can cause the demand and aggressive behavior to backfire in a pretty scary way. These situations serve to remind the viewer that magic words that get slung around in fiction do not always work. And there's a couple comedic variants. In one, the scene happens as normal until the person realizes "Hey, wait a minute, I just got thrown out of my own house"; in another, they keep tripping over stuff and their reply to "Get out!" is "I'm trying, I'm trying!" A final variant is the Literal Genie version, where a literal-minded person or a passive-aggressive person will interpret "Get out!" as "leave the area entirely", not "give me time to cool down", and if uttered, "I never want to see you again" will mean that the person won't be coming back, ever, unless, that is, they can convince them that they changed their mind.
If this is a cartoon, expect them to be given the boot whether they were going to leave on their own or not, literally kicked far away from the place.
Also used from time to time by a really pissed-off character who is on the defensive and has just put an intruder on the bad side of a beat down. Cue them throwing the opponent out the nearest door or window, or off the roof, while uttering some form of this, usually followed by "and don't come back!" Alternatively, someone commandeering or forcibly taking over a building or vehicle may say this to defeated defenders or frightened bystanders. It can also be a Moment of Awesome when used on someone discovered to be the mole, usually an employee or an ex-lover. Can be Nightmare Fuel if delivered by an omnipotent voice in a giant maze.
It's also a classic line used by sentient Haunted Houses. And old Aztec temples.
A case of a Naked First Impression or other scene where one character walks in on another in a state of undress may trigger this as well. Either that or a Megaton Punch. Or both. See "No Peeking!" Request for when they ask for the character to leave or run away before this happened.
Occasionally, characters are a bit more polite about it, choosing to deliver the trope as a question. "Will you get out of here? Please?" This is not a request, but a demand, and continued refusal to leave will lead to the original stock phrase being used. And there's also the more panicked variety when someone is about to come in who isn't supposed to see you, in which case, expect to be stuffed in closets, bathrooms, refrigerators, or whatever, with the eventual response being that they've shoved them everywhere but through the exit door.
It's also a very common Lame Pun Reaction. Bonus points if the maker of the pun actually gets up and leaves.
There may be some House Amnesia, if the person who is supposed to leave actually owns the place they are leaving.
Not to be confused with the expression of disbelief — saying, "No, get out! That's unbelievable!"
If you are putting an example on a Stock Phrases page like this, please give context.
If you're looking for the 2017 movie, see here.
Example subpages
Other examples:
- Only Stwpd Cowz Txt N Drive: The graphic, 30-minute Public Information Film warning of the dangers of texting and driving — four people, including two teenaged girls, die in the accident directly caused by their driver's inattentiveness to the road—includes a scene where, after one of the funerals, the guilty driver's parents try to pay condolences to one of the grief-stricken fathers. He tells them they are no longer welcome in his life before ordering them out... and then warns the father that if he tries to visit again, the consequences will be deadly.
- Adolf: In Chapter 30, Adolf Kaufman's mother tearfully disowns him and tells him to pack up his stuff and leave when he turns to Nazism.
- Assassination Classroom: In Irina's introductory arc/episode, she mocks the students she's supposed to be teaching and tells them that as their school's misfit failure, studying would be meaningless to them and they should just leave the matter of killing Koro-sensei to her. The students reply with the trope; first in Tranquil Fury mode, then by angrily pelting her with school supplies.
- Ayakashi Triangle: When Matsuri believes she's an Opposite-Sex Clone who doesn't belong at the original's home, she ends up sharing a bath with Soga at his house. After she asks if she'd be happy as Soga's bride, Soga throws Matsuri out of the tub while yelling to leave. He may have just meant "get out of my sight", but Matsuri leaves his house entirely.
Soga: Kazamaki would never get swept up in things and lose sight of himself! Go sort yourself out!
- Azumanga Daioh: Yukari goes to Minamo's house because construction is keeping her awake. Upon attempting to take a nap, she learns that Minamo owns a very expensive designer pillow.
Yukari: You damn bourgeoisie! Get out!
Minamo: And go where? - Betrayal Knows My Name: In episode 6 Yuki screams this while giving a Cooldown Hug to a girl possessed by a demon.
- Black Butler: In chapter 68, Ciel goes to the purple house dormitory and is told to get out.
- Code Geass: In Episode 44 (or Episode 19 of R2), Lelouch furiously snaps at Rolo after Nunnally was seemingly killed in the first F.L.E.I.J.A., which decimated Tokyo. Catching Rolo holding onto the locket that he gave to him when he had False Memories, Lelouch snatches it away, saying that he'd always meant to give it to Nunnally, not him. Then he accuses Rolo of trying to replace Nunnally (which is true since Rolo had actively attempted to kill her so that he could be Lelouch's sibling alone), declares that he actually hates him, and reveals that he tried to kill him several times. Rolo is so shocked by the Anguished Outburst that he doesn't move until Lelouch finally screams at him to "GET OUT!!!"
- Dear Brother: Rei throws Nanako out of her apartment in episode 14, when she catches her trying to throw Rei's drugs into the trash. Unlike other cases, she later goes searching for Nanako and apologizes.
- Desire Climax: In one scene Hina yells this at Shoei upon finding him and Mio together. Later in chapter 18 Shoei yells this at Mio when she comes into his room to talk.
- In Digimon Adventure, Mimi is pushing Biyomon and Palmon in a stroller as part of their cover. She soon tires of this.
Palmon: I'm supposed to be a cute little baby!
Mimi: You just grew up! Now, get out! - Dragon Ball Super: After a Blackmail Backfire by Barry Khan gets him reamed out by Videl, Gohan tells him to get out before he wakes up baby Pan. When Barry tries to threaten him, Gohan uses just a small bit of his strength to shove him against a wall and to reiterate for him to get out.
- In Fruits Basket, Yuki does this to Shigure when he finds out that Kyo will be sharing the house: "Don't eat. Don't come near me. Don't ever speak to me again." To very comic effect.
- In episode 10 of Gankutsuou Gerard says this to Albert and Maximilien when the two come to visit his sick daughter Valentine.
- Ginga Densetsu Weed: In the anime, Weed says this phrase exactly to Jerome after the latter kills Thunder and Lector.
- JoJo's Bizarre Adventure:
- Stone Ocean: Jolyne's first instance once Jotaro arrives at the prison is to assault the nearby guard and wants Jotaro to leave so she can get back to her cell.
- Steel Ball Run: In Johnny's past, when he got into a scuffle with his father and got him injured, George declares Johnny should have died in place of Nicholas and demands to get out of their house.
- JoJolion: Upon seeing fake photographs and having Josuke Mistaken for Misogynist, Yasuho asks him to leave Morioh before fleeing in disgust.
- Lady!!: During her second day at Marble Mansion, Lynn wanders into her older half-sister Sarah's room and gets this as a response. Lynn asks that they at least eat together, before being pulled away by a maid.
- In A Little Snow Fairy Sugar, Sugar has written an apology letter to Saga. The problems are: first, that she picked the worst thing to write on in the form of a musical score written by Saga's deceased mother, and second, that Saga can't read the language that fairies write in. This ticks Saga off and orders Sugar to go away and never come back.They later reconcile after Pepper translates, and Saga goes and finds her in a "haunted" house (haunted by ill-behaved lightning and ice fairies, that is), but it is emotionally a rough patch for both.
- Lucky Star: Konata paid a visit to a sick Kagami, causing the latter to blush in appreciation... but when she found out that Konata did just that to borrow her homework or her games...
Kagami: Out.
- Tohru from Miss Kobayashi's Dragon Maid takes this one step further in Chapter 26/Episode 8, when her rival Elma comes over to give a gift to Kobayashi. Already in Clingy Jealous Girl mode, Tohru states "Begone, Elma." right before blasting her straight through the front door and off into the horizon. Elma survives, but is knocked completely senseless.
- One Piece: Luffy gave Captain Kuro the "throw him out" treatment, along with a brief "The Reason You Suck" Speech, when he beat Kuro and threw him bodily back to his former crew, telling them not to return. The Black Cat pirates got out of there in a hurry.
- Red Ash: Gearworld: Beck orders Call to leave their van not long after she burst in unexpectedly (and knocked his and Tyger's lunches on the floor when doing so).
- Sailor Moon R: In episode 78, Rei delivers a belter of a Get Out (implied by the volume of her scream in the Japanese and DiC dub, explicit in the Viz dub) to Minako after she trashes her room in a bout of Comically Inept Healing.
- School Days: Sekai yells this at Kotonoha repeatedly in episode 12 upon finding her in Makoto's house.
- SHUFFLE!: The English dubbed version of episode 19 has a scene where Kaede whispers "Get out" repeatedly before screaming it and then attacking Asa, trying to forcibly remove her from the Tsuchimi house. In the original Japanese, Kaede asks and then yells at Asa to "go back" instead (presumably to her own house), but the feeling is the same.
Kaede: [dub] Get out. Get out of this house. Get out of this house. Get out, get out, get out. Get out! Get out of my house! Go away!
Kaede: [sub] Go back. Please go back, please go back, please, go back, go back, go back... Go back! Go back! Go back! - In Toradora!, Yasuko makes her message clear with nothing more than a grunt, a directional thumb and a handful of cash after Ryuuji, Taiga and Kitamura wake her up while being too loud in the house.
- Toward the Terra: In episode 22, Keith shouts at Matsuka to get out after Matsuka accidentally reads his mind and is bold enough to suggest that Keith is more human than he's willing to admit.
- Big Finish Doctor Who:
- Doctor Who: The Eighth Doctor Adventures: At the end of "To the Death", companion Lucie Miller undertakes a Suicide Mission to stop the Daleks' dastardly plans for Earth. The Daleks were put in this position with the assistance of the Monk, something kept secret by him from the Doctor until after Lucie's death. When he reveals the truth, ashamed, the Doctor is so enraged, he bellows at the Monk to get out of his TARDIS.
- In one Fifth Doctor story, this is part of the Lame Pun Reaction of companion Tegan Jovanka:
Tegan: Electronic life? What are we talking about here? Digital insects, computerized birds?
The Doctor: Fish in chips?
Tegan: All right, get out!
- An Eddie Murphy routine about black people and horror films, where a black family walks into a house, only for the Amityville-style house to yell GET OUT, and the family turns right back around.
- Archie Comics: In "Tryout", a flute player wants to join The Archies, feeling the band are lacking without him and suggests they change things to his liking. Once they agree he's trouble, they turn down his request and shout at him to "blow".
- Batman:
- The Long Halloween, Harvey Dent screams this at the Joker when the latter breaks into his house on Christmas Eve.
- Batman & Superman: World's Finest (1999): In issue #7, after Superman admits to Batman that he had to kill three genocidal alien supervillains.
Batman: This was right after you said you'd do anything you had to, to make sure I didn't harm the Joker?
Superman: ... Right before actually.
Batman: Get out.
- The enraged Whenua tries to drive off a Kahgarak by shouting this at it in one of the BIONICLE comics. He sounds especially ticked-off in the comic's animated version that was put on one of the Direct-to-DVD movies as a bonus feature.
- Black Magick: Rowan orders Morgan out of her house when they argue.
- The comic book version of The Cheetahmen shows that the titular heroes were raised for fifteen years by the villain, Doctor Morbis, before he instructs them to rob a nearby village. When they refuse to do so, Morbis is outraged and disowns them, kicking them out of his lair and sending them to fend for themselves.
- Death, Lies, and Treachery: In his first scene, Boba Fett chases a fugitive into a bar and kills him. The bartender makes it clear that he's unwelcome.
Bartender: You've done your killer's work, Boba Fett. Get out.
- Hawkeye: A light-hearted example in Hawkeye (2012), as Clint's argument over the best Bruce in rock music gets him kicked out by his teenage protege Kate. Kicked out of his own apartment. In the building he owns.
- The Outside Circle: Pete orders his girlfriend to get out of his car when she tells him she's pregnant. He refuses to believe the child is his, and pretty much calls her unfaithful.
- Phonogram: In "The Immaterial Girl" #3 both Claire and Emily end up in front of their childhood self demanding that when she make her deal she include terms that will ensure the existence of one or the other. Unfortunately for them, Young Claire isn't particularly impressed with either of them...
Young Claire: I'm not going to end up like either of you. I'm not going to be a slapper or a silly goth girl. I'm going to be better than that. I'm going to be amazing. (Young Claire's eyes glow white and speech bubbles turn black with white text) I BANISH YOU! BEGONE! RETURN TO WHENCE YOU CAME!
- The Sandman: Thessaly calmly tells Lyta that she has a few hours to shower, get dressed, and Get Out! before a lot of creatures come after Lyta, including her, for killing Dream.
- Sonic the Hedgehog (Archie Comics):
- In Issue 235, Sonic hits his Rage Breaking Point towards Silver accusing any of his friends of being the traitor and demands him to leave after giving him a brutal "The Reason You Suck" Speech. He also demands Geoffrey St. John to leave when he shows up at Antoine's hospital room unwelcomed but the skunk stands his ground, salutes the fallen Freedom Fighter, and gives his condolence to Sonic over Sally getting roboticized while taking his leave.
- During Hope Kintobor's final meeting with her brother, Robotonik's right-hand man Snively, she has this to say in response to his We Can Rule Together speech (when for a second she'd had a Hope Spot that he was making a Heel–Face Turn), chasing him out of the room with a laser-powered shield, then breaking down crying.
Hope: Get out of my workshop. Get out of my country. Get out of my LIFE!
- Spider-Man: In The Night Gwen Stacy Died, as Peter grieves for Gwen Stacy, he tells Mary Jane Watson to get out and leave him alone. She refuses.
- Superman:
- In Kingdom Come, the UN delegates express anger at Superman and Wonder Woman for building a meta-human prison in the middle of Kansas without telling anyone nor even asking for permission, and the President hints they're getting sick of superhumans before telling them leave the building.
Perhaps it is time that we began to decide some things for ourselves. Good day.
- In Who is Superwoman?, Lois firmly tells Kara to leave her apartment after the Girl of Steel says her sister Lucy was a super-villain whom Kara might have accidentally killed in self-defence.
- In Strangers at the Heart's Core, Supergirl shouts at Lesla to get out while punching her spirit out of her mind.
Supergirl: Get out, Lesla-Lar— GET OUT OF MY MIND!"
- Superman vs. Shazam!: Morgan Edge shouts Steve Lombard out of his building when it turns out Lombard has no pictures to show because he forgot to load his video camera.
Morgan Edge: Lombard, you are such an idiot — firing you would be like cruelty to a dumb animal! Get out of my building before I—
- In The Strange Revenge of Lena Luthor, Supergirl tries to visit her friend Lena after she has been discharged from the hospital and returned home; but Lena—who now knows Supergirl has been keeping her birth's secret from her for years—angrily throws Supergirl out.
Lena Thorul: Now I know the secret you've been keeping from me—that Lex Luthor, one of the world's most monstrous criminals... is my brother! We were friends... I trusted you... But you betrayed me! Now get out of my sight, Supergirl... GET OUT!
- Way of the World: At the behest of his cousin, Superman tries to explain to Thomas Price's parents Supergirl's plan to bring their son back to life. However, Mr. Price feels freaked out by their proposal to inject nanomachines into Thomas' blood, and angrily tells them to go away.
Henry Price: You need to leave. You need to leave right now.
- Good-Looking Corpse: After dealing with a super-villain squad, Supergirl tells two teenagers who were watching the fight and snapping pictures to get out of the rooftops already.
Supergirl: "You two need to leave."
First Boy: "We'll make our own way in our own sweet time, babe."
Second Boy: "Yeah, we're on our own clock."
Supergirl: "NOW."
Second Boy: "Hey!"
First Boy: "Quit shoving us!" - The Super-Revenge of Lex Luthor: While hunting for Luthor, Superman travels to Lexor, a planet where Luthor has convinced everyone that he is a benevolent genius—who is being hounded and harassed by the villainous Superman—after leading a one-man worldwide industrial revolution. During his search of the capital city, Superman runs into Ardora, Lex's wife, who shouts at him to get out while throwing stuff at him.
- In World of Krypton, Lara slaps Zod twice and tells him to get out of her house after he hits her husband.
Dru-Zod: Lara... I—
Lara: (slapping him) Get. Out. - The K-Metal from Krypton: Clark and Lois try to get an interview with the gangster "Rocks" Gordon; but as soon as the man learns they are journalists, he shouts "Reporters OUT!" as one of his bodyguards shoves the couple out of the door.
- In Superman vs. the Amazing Spider-Man, after Peter Parker accidentally makes J. Jonah Jameson look bad:
Jameson: Get out of my office, Parker! Out of my building! Get out! GET OUT! GET OUT! - In Kingdom Come, the UN delegates express anger at Superman and Wonder Woman for building a meta-human prison in the middle of Kansas without telling anyone nor even asking for permission, and the President hints they're getting sick of superhumans before telling them leave the building.
- The Transformers: Monstrosity: Optimus to Dai Atlas after he runs out of patience.
Optimus: You can leave my spaceport now.
- Underworld Unleashed: When several of the assorted villains and former villains at Neron's gathering (including Riddler, Fiddler, Poison Ivy, Prankster, and Silver Swan) mutter about how they don't want to sell their souls, Neron transports them away, yelling "Then go!" and calling them pathetic, inconsequential people who he believes will end up in Hell anyway.
- In a Funky Winkerbean strip, when Devon learned that Lisa Moore was the birth mother who had given him up for adoption, Tom Batiuk drew Elaine shouting "Shut Up!" to Seinfeld, to illustrate Devon's girlfriend's reaction.
- "The Cat on the Dovrefell": When a pack of trolls invaded Halvor's cottage and accidentally woke Halvor's guest's bear up, "the white bear rose up and growled, and hunted the whole pack of them out of doors, both great and small."
- Beauty and the Beast (1991):
- The Beast roars it at Belle when he finds her in the West Wing and when she almost touches his Enchanted Rose.
Beast: [screaming, thrashing at the furniture] GET OUT! GET OUUUUUUUUUT!
- At the climax, the Beast, having become a better person because of Belle, gives a colder and much more Tranquil Fury delivery to Gaston when he exposes him as the true coward he is, pathetically begging for his life.
- The Beast roars it at Belle when he finds her in the West Wing and when she almost touches his Enchanted Rose.
- Brave: The woodcarver tells Merida to get out of her shop when she realizes that she's not going to buy anything, though she changes her tune when the princess gives her her necklace in exchange for all of her handcarved items and a spell to change her mother.
- The Brave Little Toaster yells "Get outta here!" at a frog that was making funny faces in its reflection on him.
- Coco:
- During Miguel's montage of Elena denying music, she spots a trio of traveling musicians and tells them to leave the house.
- Chicharrón says this to Héctor upon their meeting prior to being forgotten.
- Corpse Bride: Emily says this to Lord Barkis when he tries to stab Victor and ends up stabbing her undead body in the finale.
- Elemental (2023): Bernie says this to Wade after he "desecrates" his food with water.
- The Hunchback of Notre Dame:
- A guard interrupts Frollo's Villain Song to inform him that Esmeralda has escaped from the cathedral. Displeased at this turn of events, Frollo dismisses him with "Get out, you idiot!"
- Quasimodo also plays this trope, shouting at Phoebus "No soldiers! Sanctuary! Get out!" upon hearing him ask where Esmeralda is. Phoebus leaves, but asks Quasimodo to pass on his message for him (that he didn't mean to trap Esmeralda in the cathedral, but it was the only way to save her).
- The Lion King:
- The Lion King:
- Scar tells Simba to "Run away and never return", convincing Simba that he's responsible for Mufasa's death. When a grown-up Simba eventually comes back to Pride Rock and learns that Scar himself is the real murderer, Simba utters these words back at Scar.
- Scar does it to the hyenas during the complaint that there’s no food.
- In The Lion King II: Simba's Pride, Simba does this twice to Zira in the same scene.
Simba: You and your young cub, get out.
Zira: Haven't you met my son, Kovu? He was hand chosen by Scar to follow in his pawprints and become king.
[Kovu shivers noisily in fear]
Timon: That's not a king! That's a fuzzy maraca!
Zira: Kovu was the last born before you exiled us to the Outlands, where we have little food... less water...
Simba: You know the penalty for returning to the Pridelands.
Zira: But the child does not. However, if you need your pound of flesh... here. [pushes Kovu forward]
Simba: Take him and get out. We're finished here.
- The Lion King:
- Midway through Klaus (2019), Jesper discovers an old shelf that Klaus made with his deceased wife Lydia while trying to pitch his idea of Klaus making new toys and bringing them to the kids of Smeerensburg. Klaus is so distraught over Jesper’s actions that he demands that he leave, making this one of the few times that Klaus genuinely gets angry.
- In The Mysterious Geographic Explorations of Jasper Morello, Captain Griswald bellows at the titular character to get off his ship, since he hasn't forgotten how Jasper's navigational errors got a man killed on their last voyage together. Jasper is carrying an official letter from the admiralty reinstating him as the ship's navigator, however, so Griswald has no choice but to begrudgingly welcome him aboard.
- Open Season: When Elliot sneaks into the backstage for the Timberline nature show in order to get away from Shaw, Boog tells him to get out twice, once when he first enters the backstage, and again after he calls him "Buddy".
- In Osmosis Jones, Shane's teacher, Mrs. Boyd, screams at Frank after Ozzy pops a zit onto her lip.
Mrs. Boyd: Get out! Out! The answer is no! Absolutely not!
- The Prince of Egypt:
- During the plague of darkness, Rameses shouts this to Moses, throwing his goblet of wine at him. Moses, however, stays and tries to make Rameses talk to him.
- Later, after the death of the firstborn, Moses tries to comfort Rameses, but Rameses, in a fit of rage shouts at him, "LEAVE ME!"
- Ratatouille:
- Skinner telling Linguini to get out of the food storage room after asking what he (Linguini) was doing in there.
- Linguini orders Rémy and the other rats out after discovering them raiding the kitchen, and warns Rémy to never come back before slamming the doors on him.
- In Robin Hood, Friar Tuck yells this to the Sheriff of Nottingham after he takes money out of the church poor box, and then threatens to hang the friar when he objects.
Friar Tuck: Get out of my church! Out! Out! Out! Out!
- In Robots, during the climax when Bigweld fires Ratchet, the latter retorts he's made the company more profitable than ever.
Bigweld: You're fired!
Ratchet: Fired? On what grounds? This company's never been more profitable!
Bigweld: Profit, schmofit! Now, get out! - In Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island, the ghost of the pirate Moonscar carves the words "GET OUT" into the wall with his sword as a threat to Mystery, Inc., as they investigate the zombies on the island. It turns out to actually be a warning, so that the gang can avoid the same fate Moonscar and his crew had faced.
- The title character of Shrek 1 does this when telling Donkey he has to sleep outside. He also tries to shoo out the fairy tale creatures that had taken refuge in his swamp. Unfortunately for him, they're all there because they have nowhere else to go. They have been put there by Lord Farquaad.
Shrek: Attention, all fairy tale things, don't get comfortable. Your welcome is officially worn out. In fact, I'm gonna see this guy Farquaad right now, and get you all off my land and back where you came from!
(All the fairy tale creatures cheer) - In the recobbled cut of The Thief and the Cobbler, King Nod shouts at Zigzag to leave the palace after Zigzag asked permission to wed princess Yum-Yum, which the king refused. This results in Zigzag throwing in his lot with the invading One-Eyes.
- In Turning Red, when Ming comes into the bathroom against Mei's wishes, Mei yells at her "Will you just get out?".
- In Wreck-It Ralph, Calhoun does this to Felix after he inadvertently causes her to have a Troubled Backstory Flashback.
- In Ralph Breaks the Internet, Double Dan kicks Ralph, Spamley and Gord out of his virus workshop when he catches them looking as his "little brother" while telling them about Arthur the virus, telling them to get out.
- Quite a popular way in the UK for expressing how bad you think somebody's joke was. Example:
Joke teller: So are you coming to the duck do tonight?
Victim: What's a duck do?
Joke teller: It goes quack!
Victim: ...Get out. - A Brazilian saying goes "The door out is courtesy of the house".
By Author:
- Dr. Seuss:
- This is shouted by Mayzie the lazy bird in the story Horton Hatches the Egg when, after allowing Horton to sit on her egg because she's too lazy for that responsibility, the egg starts hatching:
"But it's MINE!" screamed the bird, when she heard the egg crack.
(The work was all done. Now she wanted it back.)
"It's MY egg!" she sputtered. "You stole it from me!
Get off of my nest and get out of my tree!" - Marvin K. Mooney, Will You Please Go Now! is an entire book of telling the main character this.
- In The Cat in the Hat, the Fish tells the Cat in the Hat "You should not be here when our mother is not! You get out of this house!" after the latter drops a bunch of stuff he was balancing, including the former, who lands in a teapot. Later, the boy telling the story tells the Cat to pack up Thing 1 and Thing 2 and go away after the Things wreck the house even more when they fly their kites through it.
- In The Cat in the Hat Comes Back, the boy says the trope name again word for word after finding the Cat eating cake in the bath tub while the water is running.
- This is shouted by Mayzie the lazy bird in the story Horton Hatches the Egg when, after allowing Horton to sit on her egg because she's too lazy for that responsibility, the egg starts hatching:
- Many of P. G. Wodehouse's bossier characters, like Sir Aylmer Bostock in Uncle Dynamite (whose nephew eventually turns the books on him), Sir Raymond Bastable in Cocktail Time and Lord Tillbury (in a lot of books) are like that.
- Even sweet Bertie Wooster does this to Jeeves in the short story "Jeeves Takes Charge", after Jeeves' actions result in his engagement being broken off. He uses the exact phrase. Three times.
By Title:
- In Artemis Fowl Butler says a variation of this when he goes all Brother Wolf on a troll. He, after throwing it out a window, says "And don't come back" implying that he said this exact phrase.
- Discworld In Hogfather, this is Mustrum Ridcully's response to meeting the Glingle-Glingle-Glingle Fairy, who's responsible for the tinkling bells that were heard whenever the wizards accidentally conjured up a new Anthropomorphic Personification.
- Strangely parodied in Everlost. There's a haunted house that constantly moans "GET OUT...!" but goes unnoticed because the only people living in the house are a husband and wife, who are both completely deaf. The book even mentions its intense frustration at not having any hands with which to communicate with the couple using American Sign Language.
- Earth's Scariest Monsters!: In "Holy Blessings," the angel Melody tells Satan (who had been masquerading as the human male Louis Cypher) to "get out of here" as her fists glow with holy white light and tells him to not come near Isabelle and Jermaine again after the angel successfully prevents the evil demon from goading Jermaine into making a Deal with the Devil with him.
- In The Fault in Our Stars, Hazel yells this at Van Houten when he gets into her car to try and talk to her.
- Fuzzy Nation: Near the end of the book, the MegaCorp personnel have to vacate the planet due to its native species being recognized as sapient and are given three months to shut everything down and ship out anyone who doesn't wish to quit and work for the new government. The two main executives and The Dragon are also made to leave at the very beginning of that period, especially The Dragon due to the harm he's inflicted on Papa Fuzzy's family.
Papa Fuzzy: Get off my planet, you son of a bitch.
- Ghosts of the Titanic: After Kevin sings a song about the Titanic in class, Mrs. Ratchet gets so mad at him that she shouts "Get out!" at him.
- Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix:
- Harry has never been a welcome family member to Uncle Vernon and Aunt Petunia, with whom he lives. But when Dudley gets attacked by a Dementor, supposedly sent by a recently resurrected Lord Voldemort but actually sent by Dolores Umbridge in an attempt to sabotage Harry and get him expelled from school for fighting back, it's the last straw for Vernon, who furiously demands Harry get out and never return before Petunia overrules him because of her pact with Dumbledore.
- Simplified to "OUT!" by Sirius Black. Unfortunately, Kreacher takes the command to leave the room as an invitation to leave the house and go to the Malfoys. Oops.
- When Harry sees Snape's worst memory in the Pensieve, Snape throws a jar of cockroaches at him yelling at him to get out of his office and never come back.
- The In Death series: This pops up a few times, like in the books Purity in Death and New York to Dallas.
- Legends of Ithyria: Shasta angrily orders Talon to leave when she criticizes the outfit Shasta intends to wear on her 17th birthday for being too revealing, saying this makes her look like a harlot. This comes back to bite her as Talon initially isn't there to stop Kumire from trying to rape her, and Kumire accuses Shasta of leading him on with said revealing outfit.
- In E.E. "Doc" Smith's Lensman universe, most Lensmen are only permitted to go to Arisia once, to receive their Lens and are then explicitly told (with varying degrees of politeness) not to return or to attempt further communication. One of the earliest recipients is simply told "Scram!" (with, as he states to his colleagues, the unstated but clearly understood implication of "...and STAY scrammed").
- Macdonald Hall: In The War with Mr. Wizzle, the eponymous Dean Bitterman tries to cure Sidney of his clumsiness by enrolling him in a ballet class at the neighboring finishing school. After Sidney wrecks the gym and injures a few students while trying out a dance step, Ms. Peabody carries him out of the building by the scruff of his pants, throws him into the road (after making sure no cars are nearby), and yells, "Now beat it! And don't come back."
- Magic Hour: In "Troll Job," the male troll Zulkis twice angrily tells Heidi and Jermaine to get out of his cave after becoming frustrated with her repeated (and unwanted) attempts to befriend the antisocial troll.
- In the Mr. Men book "Mr. Men Go Camping", Little Miss Bossy orders a bear to get out of her camp when it causes distress for the other Mr. Men characters. Her bossiness is enough to scare the bear away.
- Only the Dead Are Cold-Blooded: Jenny slaps Crow and orders him out of her apartment after he questions the character of her rich client.
- Posse From Hell: After one too many insults from the three Ungrateful Townsfolk spokesmen, Banner tells them that if they haven’t gotten out of the office by the time he stands up and takes a deep breath, he is going to throw them through the window of his office no matter how tricky it is to get them between the bars of that window.
- Deconstructed in Douglas Adams's The Restaurant at the End of the Universe, when a guard points a gun at the protagonists and simply says, "Out." The narrator then comments that "People who can supply that amount of firepower don't need to supply verbs as well."
- In the Sherlock Holmes story "The Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle", Holmes manages to figure out that the aforementioned stone had been stolen by a hotelier who in turn pinned the blame onto someone else. He has the jewel and the man dead to rights, so what does he do? He opens the door and demands the man leave...now. Why? Because it was Christmas, because it was likely that returning the carbuncle to its rightful owner would be enough to release the innocent man from jail...and because the actual perpetrator was practically scared straight from the whole episode. Why bother Scotland Yard at this point?
- Sir Henry Merrivale: In The Curse of the Bronze Lamp, John Loring survives a murder attempt at the hands of a trusted colleague who was stealing from him, then confronts the crook in his home after Fell makes a long summation while letting the villain think the murder was successful, largely to make him have a Villainous Breakdown about being hanged. John says that he won't press charges, but tells his formerly trusted friend to "get out", saying this three times in a row for emphasis.
- The Stand: When Fran was a child, she got scraped up in an accident and staggered into her mother's zealously-maintained parlor dripping blood. Her mother yelled this phrase at her, then came to help her, not-so-coincidentally dragging Fran from the room in the process. The neighbor who her mother was entertaining at the time didn't come around much after that.
- In the Sweet Valley High book Nowhere To Run, Emily Mayer has spent the entirety of the book being treated like crap by her Wicked Stepmother, who caps off her horrible behavior by lying to her father so that he'll be on her side. After Emily saves her baby sister from choking, her father walks in on the chaos and thanks to all the lies his wife has told him, assumes Emily tried to hurt the baby and proceeds to order her out of the house.
- Where The Lillies Bloom: After Kiser suggests that her sick father could have done a better job farming his property, Mary Call tells him to get off their land. Kiser reminds her that it hasn't been their land for four years and they're just his tenants. He does leave, but only because he feels like it.
- The Wind in the Willows: Mole gets told to get out by a passing rabbit when he enters the Wild Wood.
- Zara Hossain Is Here: Zara's dad orders Zareen out of his house when she denounces Zara's bisexuality.
- Barbra Streisand and Donna Summer's Disco duet "No More Tears (Enough is Enough)".
Enough is enough is enough
I can't go on, I can't go on, no more no
enough is enough is enough
I want him out, I want him out that door now - Busta Rhymes' "Get Out!!"
So (Get out)
Bitch nigga just (Get out)
You need to just (Get out of here)
Police'll try to close the club (Get out)
You really should (Get out)
You need to just (Get out of here)
Bitch, if you ain't got your own dough (Get out)
You need to just (Get out)
You really should (Get out of here)
If you frontin' like you really live (Get out)
And you know you not (Get out)
You need to just (Get out of here) - Carman's "Get Out Of My Life" is basically about saying this to the Devil.
- DAGames song Get Out is based of the video game Hello Neighbor, and is about the title neighbor demanding the player character to stop snooping in his house. At multiple points during the chorus he yells "now get out".
You may think I'm the devil
And I wish your life's in peril
Let me spell this out for you
I'm just your neighbor
Now get out
Where are you now?
Play hide and seek
But I'll always find you out
Now get out
You're a nuisance to my plansNow get out
Now get out - In How Can You Face Me?
by Fats Waller, he growls this during his instrumental:
Ah, you dirty dog, get out on the streets. Get out. Get out. - At the iTunes Festival, Dave Grohl of The Foo Fighters saw a member of the crowd fighting with other audience members
. Grohl promptly tossed the guy out, complete with a Cluster F-Bomb.
Dave Grohl: Look at me right here, motherfucker! Look at me! Look at me! Get the fuck out of my show right now! Get the fuck out! (crowd cheer)] Get the fuck out of my show! Get the fuck out of my show right now! You don't come to my show and fight! You come to my show and fucking dance, you asshole! Get the fuck out of here! - George Michael's "Faith":
Well it takes a strong man baby
But I'm showing you the door! - "Get Out of My Dreams (And into My Car)"
- From the title, that sounds like an inversion.
- Hustler, "Get Outta Me 'Ouse"
Out! Out! Get outta me 'ouse!
You better take yer trenchcoat too.
No daughter o' mine's goin' out wiv an 'ippie
Or a scruffy little bleeder like you! - Gloria Gaynor's "I Will Survive" has this at the top of the chorus:
Go on now, go
Walk out the door
Just turn around now
'Cause you're not welcome anymore - "Leave Here" from !HERO: The Rock Opera is this sung by a girl posse of prostitutes to both Hero and his disciple Maggie.
- JoJo's "Leave (Get Out)".
Get out (leave!)
Right now
It's the end of you and me
It's too late (now!)
And I can't wait
For you to be gone - The Lonely Island's "Mama" has the trio screaming this at their mother like all good sons do whenever she interrupts their recording session incessantly.
- Japanese alt-Idol group PassCode has one, in English, at the end of their song "Never Sleep Again".
Get out of my face!
- Ray Charles: "Hit the road, Jack, and don't you come back!]]" (no more, no more, no more, no more)
- What you say?!
- Professional basketball arenas like to keep that song handy in the event of an ejection.
- The Rolling Stones (Band): Not quite it, but "Hey! You! Get off of my cloud" sure qualifies.
- The Supremes with "You Keep Me Hangin' On" (later covered by Kim Wilde ):
Get out, get outta my life
And let me sleep at night
Cuz you don't really love me
You just keep me hangin' on
- In some versions of the story of Lucifer's fall from grace, God created humanity and ordered the angels to bow down to them. Lucifer refused to do so (in the Christian version, due to his ego, in Islamic version due to what can be best described as "arrogant racism", and in the Sufi's version, because he loved God so much that he could not bear to bow down to anyone else), so God told him to (in so many words) "Go to Hell."
- In The Bible:
- At the beginning of the story of the Exodus, the Pharaoh of Egypt refused to let the Israelites leave, even for a just a few days (as they were valuable slave labor). By the time God was done sending His plagues, though, his response became "Get out of my country before we all die!"
- The basis for the Old Testament law (based on Deuteronomy 24) requiring a man to write out a certificate if he wanted to divorce his wife was to help the wife determine whether, when he angrily dismissed her, he was merely telling her to get out of his face or telling her to get out of his life. (In ancient languages, such distinctions weren't always that easy to make.)
- In the Gospels, after Jesus drove the demon Legion out of their host and into a herd of pigs (who promptly drowned themselves), the gentile locals (many of whom had probably owned some of the pigs in that herd) asked him to leave.
- In the Talmud (specifically Bava Batra 23b), after one too many weird hypotheticals:
And it was for his question about this far-fetched scenario that they removed Rabbi Yirmeya from the study hall.
- In Alien: Isolation (Zen Studios), once the player manages to open the airlock in the Wizard Mode to throw out the Xenomorph, Amanda Ripley screams "Get off my ship, you monster!" at it before the player finally shoots it out of the airlock through a nearby ramp.
- In a Shout-Out to Terminator 2, shooting the unlit Tube saucer in No Fear: Dangerous Sports prompts the Skull to say "Get out!"
- Shooting the unlit Database saucer in Terminator 2: Judgment Day prompts The Terminator to say "Get out", and after that, the ball gets ejected.
- In a memorable promotional segment leading up to the WWF's first WrestleMania, "Mean" Gene Okerlund attempts to interview Roddy Piper, Paul "Mr. Wonderful" Orndorff and "Cowboy" Bob Orton as they train for the main event (against Hulk Hogan and Mr. T) at New York City's Mid-City Health Club. Repeated, Piper and Orndorff warned Okerlund to leave, growing more irritated and annoyed by the second ... until finally they do eject him, forcibly. When they begin to stalk him, Piper snickers evilly, "We told you to get out!"
- When the WWF was forced to change to WWE, its tagline for it became "Get the 'F' out."
- Happened as part of a famous exchange in CHIKARA between Player Uno and Delirious. As Delirious mocked the Nintendo fanboy Uno by name-dropping other game systems, until Delirious shouted "3D0!" Uno responded with the trope verbatim. Delirious topped it off by crossing the line and pressing Uno's Berserk Button: "Princess Peach is a TRAMP!"
Mike Quackenbush: [on commentary] "Get out!" says Player Uno, as does every self-respecting gamer!
- In All Japan Women's Pro-Wrestling in the 80s, arenas reverberated with crowds of schoolgirls chanting "KAERE!" (Japanese for "Leave!") at hated Heels Dump Matsumoto and the Atrocious Alliance.
- On The Muppet Show, Kermit the Frog would sometimes lose his temper and snap "Will you get outta here?!" at whoever was annoying him (usually Fozzie with some dumb joke or Gonzo with a crazy idea for an act).
- The Wubbulous World of Dr. Seuss: In "The Guest", the Grinch checks into the Lake Malloon lodge for the purpose of sabotaging the fun of everyone there, including Larry Nooly, a young boy who is dragged along by his parents, who are on their second honeymoon. Although the Grinch succeeds in driving everyone else away, Larry is determined not to let the Grinch drive him away as well. The Grinch takes over the lodge's TV station and is on every channel, one of which has him host a music video called "Get Out of Town" which is dedicated to this trope.
- A memorable scene from The Goon Show, by Grytpype-Thynne, answering the door to Neddie Seagoon:
(Neddie knocks at the door)
Grytpype: Oh yes, we've been expecting you. Give me your hat and coat. Thank you. Now GET OUT!" (slams the door)
(Beat. Neddie knocks at the door again)
Grytpype: Oh yes, we've been expecting you... You left your hat and coat. There you are... Now GET OUT! (slams the door) - In one episode of I'm Sorry I Haven't a Clue, during the inevitable Double Entendre about Samantha in the lead in to the final round, one audience member had a particularly dirty laugh, which prompted Stephen Fry to cry "OUT!", and the rest of the panel to discuss how just one person reading something into an innocuous comment could ruin the show for everyone else.
- In Warhammer 40,000, a schism in the Adeptus Mechanicus spread to the Iron Hands chapter, resulting in several companies being exiled by the Iron Council. These proceeded to form their own chapter, the Sons of Medusa, one of the quite rare examples of a Space Marine chapter being founded without the consent of the High Lords of Terra. The Sons of Medusa were eventually recognized by both the Imperial government and the Iron Hands, but relations with the latter are chilly at best.
- In Cross Road, this is one of Niccolò Paganini's catch phrases, along with "shut up". Sometimes, he adds a dramatic Cape Swish, which, of course, he learned from his devil. Speaking of whom, Amduscias is Invisible to Normals, so when Niccolò throws one of these at him in the bar scene, the waiter hears, assumes it's aimed at him, and gets offended.
- In Glengarry Glen Ross, Williamson almost has to bodily throw Aaronow out of the office so as not to scare the customers:
Williamson: Will you get out of here? Will you get out of here? Will you? I'm trying to run an office here. Now, will you go to lunch? Go to lunch. Will you go to lunch!
- In Jesus Christ Superstar, Jesus tells the merchants to get out of his temple. Through Metal Scream. He later says this to Judas during "The Last Supper", And at the end of "King Herod's song", Herod tells Jesus, "Get out of my life!"
- At the end of Monty Python: Live at the Hollywood Bowl, the backing screen showed the words "The End" as the performers took their final bows and the Liberty Bell tune played. About halfway through the tune, the words changed to "Piss Off!", prompting an extra laugh from the audience. Just before the end, the lights on stage flickered to emphasize the message one last time.
- At the end of The Producers, the cast comes back onstage and kicks out the audience — in song!
Thanks for coming to see our show.
Sad to tell ya we gotta go!
Grab your hat and head for the door.
In case ya didn't notice, there ain't any more!
If you like our show tell ev'ryone but...
If you think it stinks, keep your big mouth shut!
We're glad you came but we have to shout,
Adios, au revoir, wiedersehen, ta-ta-ta,
Goodbye! Get lost! Get out! - Right before "Epiphany" in Sweeney Todd: The Demon Barber of Fleet Street, Sweeney has to deal with Anthony, who has just blown both Sweeney's plans with Turpin and his own with Johanna straight to hell.
Todd: Get out. Out, I say! Out!
- Heard at the end of Disneyland's Jungle Cruise: "Now, get out. I'm sorry, that was rude. Please — get out."
- ANNO: Mutationem: Holtz pulls out a shotgun aimed at 'Santa Clause' ordering him to get out of his home, but not before asking to be given several presents in exchange.
- Creep TV: Le Quack when he catches Courage on the set of Le Chef Cooking Show.
Next, we chop the carrots into...wait, who stole my cutting knife? Who let you in here? Nobody disturbs my kitchen! Get out, you filthy mutt!
- Donkey Kong 64: GET OUT!, pity the poor gamer who wandered into the Angry Aztec temple or the Crystal Caves cabins and had to deal with Kroc.
- In The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind, Caius Cosades, Spymaster of the Blades in Morrowind and the primary Quest Giver for the first act of the main quest, will epically go berserk if you kill a fellow Blade or kill one of the informants he sends you to talk to. While Suddenly Shouting, he will tell you to get out forever, breaking the standard way of beating the game's main quest.
- There's a Magic Researcher in Eternal Sonata, who in the PlayStation 3 Updated Re-release of the game, orders the party to "get out!" because he thinks they've Come to Gawk at him. Frederic and Polka hasten to explain that this isn't the case.
- Ensemble Stars!: In the Unit Song Event Discord Internal CONQUEST, it’s mentioned that the relationship between Childhood Friends Nagisa Ran and Hiyori Tomoe wasn’t always smooth as one would think. In the past, a young Hiyori lost his temper with Nagisa because he couldn't understand what Hiyori tried to teach him. This resulted in Hiyori yelling at Nagisa, saying this trope word for word.
- Façade (2005) offers plenty of ways for you to get thrown out of the house by Grace and Trip.
- Fallen London: At the end of "An Intimate of Devils", if you try to sell your soul to the Quiet Deviless when it's been stained by "Seeking Mr Eaten's Name". And she means permanently — this will completely erase all progress in that storyline, and the spoilered condition makes it almost impossible to start it again.
'Get out!' she whispers. 'That's the worst thing I... Get out!'
- Final Fantasy:
- Said by Yuri against the Big Bad in Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles: Ring of Fates "Get out... GET OUT!"
- Final Fantasy Tactics:
- Said by Ramza to Argath after he belittles Ramza's commoner best friend Delita.
Ramza: Begone from my sight! And do not think to return!
Argath: Your words cut deep, Ramza. Are we not friends?
Ramza: Remove yourself! I'll not ask again!
Argath: The Brigade makes its base at Ziekden. Your lord brother told me himself. You've no hope of breaching the fortress from the fore. Their defenses are too strong. A rear assault is your only chance. Best of luck, my soft-hearted friend. You'll need it.
Ramza: Begone! - Later, Ramza himself gets one from his big brother Zalbaag for suggesting him to cease the civil war. Zalbaag should have listened.
- Said by Ramza to Argath after he belittles Ramza's commoner best friend Delita.
- Final Fantasy XIII: In a flashback, Snow and Lightning are having an argument about his being engaged to her sister and he tells her to "Stop it."
Lightning: No, you stop it! Get out of my house!
- Five Nights at Freddy's:
- Completing the custom night of Five Nights at Freddy's 2 gives you a congratulatory "GREAT!" message...followed by "Now get out." in smaller, less colorful font, since you've been fired from the pizzeria.
- Five Nights at Freddy's: Security Breach: Sun throws you out of the daycare for breaking the rules and causing it to turn into Moon, alerting security as well, resulting in Chica, Monty, and Roxy all arriving in front of the daycare, and forcing Gregory to hide in Freddy's hatch. Attempting to reenter the Daycare via the slide will result in Sun stopping you before you can, and the main door into the area is locked off for the rest of the game.
- Get a Game Over on Stage 8 of Gradius Gaiden, and the announcer tells you to "get out of here" and give up.
- In Hades, Hades uses this line on Zagreus repeatedly. Mostly it is delivered in a tone of resignation, as Zagreus is attempting to escape the Underworld and Hades knows he's doomed to fail and will inevitably respawn back in his house, though if his Berserk Button is pushed or if Zagreus defeats him he'll use a more outraged version of the line by demanding Zagreus get out of his sight.
- A Hat in Time: A beautiful example comes in the form of a contract with its sole clauses being that you leave and never, ever come back and complete with pictures telling you to go away, given by a beaten-up Snatcher to the Hat Girl. She completely changes the details since the Snatcher had already stamped his wax seal on the contract and signs.
- Hollow Knight: Attempting to read the Midwife's mind with your Dream Nail causes her to realize what you're doing and lock you out with a scream of "GAH! GET OUT! GET OUT! GET OUT!"
- In Kingdom Hearts II, Beast yells this when his and Sora's Limit is initiated. Justified, since Xaldin, as well as all of the Heartless and Nobodies that accompany him, are unwanted intruders in his castle.
- In The Legend of Heroes: Trails of Cold Steel, the girls dismiss Crow's idea of having them in bikinis for the School Festival with this statement.
- Look Outside: You have the option to permanently kick any recruit out of your home for whatever reason. Whomever you kick out will always be outraged and/or despondent, and beg you to reconsider. There's an especially angry variant if you try to kick out Xaria and Monty after Xaria kicks the Rat Baby.
- Missing Children: Mizuki's mom orders Sato to leave her house after catching Sato in her room.
- A variation appears in the endgame of Monster Hunter: World: Iceborne when it becomes clear that Fatalis is about to assault Castle Schrade before it can be fortified, the General screams to his soldiers: "GET OUT!"
- In No, I'm not a Human, many conversations with your houseguests can end with you angrily telling them to leave your house, depending on your choices.
- Pikmin 4: Just before the Final Boss, Louie yells at the player to "Go home!" before siccing the Ancient Sirehound on them.
- Pokémon:
- Pokémon Red and Blue:
- If you confront the Ghosts in Pokémon Tower without the Silph Scope, they will say "Get out...get out..."
- A Jerk with a Heart of Jerk Gentleman in the SS Anne in the same games and all remakes will tell the player to get out of his room in a cruel tone after being defeated. In some games, the door is permanently locked afterwards.
- Pokémon Black 2 and White 2: Underneath the Village Bridge is a room where a girl practices her singing. But if the player enters the room, she kicks them out harshly. Entering only repeats the same method, making the room unexplorable.
- Pokémon Sun and Moon: Should you go to the motel placed just before Lush Jungle before you complete Mallow's trial there, you'll learn that your rival, Gladion, has been calling the place home. Should you enter the room he's rented out, he'll bluntly tell you to do this.
- Pokémon Ultra Sun and Ultra Moon: a lass with a Bellossom and a Comfey at the Tide Song Hotel will notice and chase the player out of her room, before disappearing. She at least leaves an Oran Berry behind as a sort of apology for her rudeness.
- Pokémon Red and Blue:
- Portal 2 has GLaDOS realize that most of her problems originate from trying to kill Chell, which has proven much harder than expected. As such the best option is to just let her go.
GLaDOS: So you know what? You win. Just go. It's been fun, don't come back.
- The Secret of Monkey Island: Annoying Meathook (typically by making fun of the fact that he's bald) causes him to yell at you and chase you out of the room. Of course, you can then reenter the room, apologize for teasing him, then tease him again.
- Spiritfarer: When Stella follows Giovanni to Oxbury at night at Astrid's request to see where he's gone, she finds him with Jennyfer at her apartment. Jennyfer tells Stella to leave because she and Giovanni are going to "get busy", confirming Astrid's suspicions that Giovanni is cheating on her again.
- One of the random events that can occur when you change screens in Transylvania is an angry voice shouting "GET OUT!" at you.
- WarioWare: Smooth Moves: When 18-Volt accidentally breaks his best buddy's new game machine, don't expect that 9-Volt would hold back his anger. The red-clad gamer kid demands that his former buddy leaves.
- Daughter for Dessert:
- The protagonist has a non-angry version. On the trip to Whiskeyville, Amanda comes into the protagonist's room, and things start to get sexual. Not wanting things to go any further, he tells Amanda to leave. It damages their relationship until he learns Amanda’s secret.
- A more conventional one occurs when a “customer” comes into the diner without any intention of ordering anything. Kathy delivers the two words.
- In Double Homework, the protagonist and Rachel agree to use the school gym for their workouts on different days so they won’t run into each other. The protagonist accidentally walks in once on Rachel’s day, and, well....
Rachel: Get out.
Protagonist: I-I was just wondering —
Rachel: Get...out. - Happens a few times in Katawa Shoujo:
- In Hanako's route, if Hisao pushes her too hard without treating her as an equal person in her own right (namely by not going out into town with her after Lilly gets Put on a Bus), she will eventually completely snap when Hisao comes to her room to check on her and insists on taking care of her when she doesn't want him to, screaming that she hates him and Lilly and ordering him out.
Hanako: Get out of my room, get out of my room, GET OUT OF MY ROOM!- In Emi's route, when Hisao has dinner at her house in Act 3... This happens no matter what the player chooses to do after Emi runs out of the room. If Hisao talk to her mother Meiko, Emi walks in on their conversation and orders Hisao to leave; if he talks to Emi, she and Hisao have a fight that ends with her throwing Hisao out.
- In Rin's route, Her bad ending has her forcing Hisao to leave the atelier where she's staying. If the player make the right choice, though, the game will continue and she and Hisao have the same argument later; she tells him to get out... but is in his room at the time, so once Hisao points out where she is, she leaves.
- In Act 1, if Misha and Shizune ask about Hisao's pills, Hisao can tell them to get out of his room, but doing so sets the player on the road to the bad ending.
- Possible at two points in Melody (2019), both of which signal the end of a romantic relationship on bad terms:
- If the protagonist proposes unprotected sex to Becca because he doesn't have a condom handy, she ends up kicking him out of her apartment.
- If Amy has dinner with Melody and the protagonist to reveal her new relationship to her niece, but the protagonist is also dating Melody, Amy yells at him to leave the restaurant. She also calls him a pervert. This is a bad ending to the game.
- Morenatsu: In his worst ending, Shin will tell the player this twice — first quietly, then screaming the words— after the main character rapes him.
- When They Cry:
- In Higurashi: When They Cry, Satoko, with support from Keiichi, Rika, and the entire village, confronts her abusive uncle Teppei, saying that she hates him and screams for him to "GET OUT!!"
- Umineko: When They Cry: In EP4, Rosa yells this at a woman from child services, who was confronting her on her neglectful/abusive treatment of her daughter Maria.
- 13 Cards: In The Stinger for Clones Make A Comic, Fëdor finds Dante in his bed and screams at him to leave the room.
- Dreamscape: Melissa orders Kaila to get the hell out of her groups site after she explains her vendetta against Keela. She obliges, but not before giving Keela some parting words...
- In the DSBT InsaniT episode "The Party", Koden orders everyone to do this when he has finally had enough of his party becoming more and more disastrous.
- "GET OUT OF MY CAR!": The Uber driver constantly tells a woman in his car to get out. Constantly.
- Homestar Runner:
- Done in the Strong Bad Email "dragon", where Strong Bad tries to get the other characters to draw dragons. He doesn't even look at Homsar's drawing (which is just a piece of paper taped to the table with the words "TASTER'S CHOICE" written on it) before kicking him out:
Strong Bad: Get out of my house!
Homsar: (forlornly) Ah do what ah'm told... - When Strong Bad needs to throw Homestar, the King of Town, and the Poopsmith out of his house in "secret identity", he bodily hurls the first two out, and then shoos the Poopsmith out by saying "Get out. Get out. Get out. Get out..." while poking him repeatedly with a fondue fork.
- In the email "lady fan", Strong Bad gets annoyed by Homestar Runner constantly butting in while impersonating an aerobics instructor, and tells Homestar "Get it out of here, Wretched Simmons!"
- Done in the Strong Bad Email "dragon", where Strong Bad tries to get the other characters to draw dragons. He doesn't even look at Homsar's drawing (which is just a piece of paper taped to the table with the words "TASTER'S CHOICE" written on it) before kicking him out:
- In the 14th installment of If the Emperor Had a Text-to-Speech Device, Marneus Calgar tells his Glory Hound Second Captain, Cato Sicarius, to get out when he reveals that he doesn't care for the Space Marines under his command. Punctuated with a threat of Imperial Fisting.
- The Nightmare Before Christmas Who: Skellington's Revenge: When the Mayor tells Jack that taking over Christmas is a bad idea, Jack tells the Mayor to take a hike, find a job in Christmas Land, and to take his weenies with him.
- In the fourth installment of "Healer" in Pebbles Quest, once Pebbles has had enough of the misfortune sustained from Bell's healing, when she touches his broken arm, he angrily yanks it back and throws her bell far away, and then musters enough strength to point with his broken arm, letting out a long, deep train whistle that carries the message that he wants Bell out of here.
- Volume 4 of RWBY has a scene where a boy trying to flirt with Weiss casually tells her, right in front of a giant painting of Beacon Academy and a sign stating the fundraiser is to raise money for Vale's plight, that he has no idea what the charity fundraiser is about, who it's for, and that he doesn't care; he only comes to these gatherings for the food, drink, and company. Weiss (who was present at the fall of Beacon, and lost several close friends there) tells him to get out before she has security come and throw him out.
- Zero Punctuation When reviewing BioShock Infinite, Yahtzee praised it as a worthy sequel to the original, upon which a fan on a leash he's pulling asks him this:
- In A Girl and Her Fed, a character makes the mistake of firing up an Augmented Reality device that will let him see ghosts (which he was unaware of until that moment) in the middle of a graveyard at night.
Agent: Ugh... hundreds of tiny winged men, all yelling at me to GET OUT... and come back during normal visiting hours...
- An Imagine Spot in hiimdaisy's Metal Gear Solid: Portable Ops comic is called when it's remarked that Snake would make a good father: Solid just mastered his sixth language! Good job! Liquid bursts in saying that he just mastered his seventh. Snake's reaction?
- John in Homestuck encounters a legion of imps in his house, and it turns out the easiest way to get them out is tell them to
.
That is IT. EVERYBODY OUT. You are DEAD SERIOUS. - This is a common response to the Insecticons and their shenanigans in the course of the Insecticomics, to the point of them being Phrase Catchers for it.
- In No Rest for the Wicked, when November intervened in the fight between Red and the witch, Red orders her out with vigor
.
- In chapter 37 of Pacificators, Muneca Powell gave Daryl Smithson a big "LEAVE!" when Daryl accidentally discovered her secret; she is covered with serious burn scars.
- Questionable Content #1749
:
Pintsize: LESS TALKING, MORE HOT MAKE-UP SEX
Marten: GET OUT.
Dora: Good suggestion, though. - Stand Still, Stay Silent: Upon exploring the mage-exclusive dreamspace, Reynir walks into another mage's protected area, not knowing that it's rude to do so. Since the mage in whose area he walked into is not a people person to start with, his approach is to punch Reynir with a moving tree while yelling at him to leave first and wonder what Reynir is even doing in his protected area later.
- A Stolen Pixels comic, where in the intro to Borderlands Marcus tells Mordecai to leave the bus for the power of having a hawk compared to Lilith, Brick and Roland.
- When Bill Jensen deals with trolls on his streams, it's very common for him to yell at them to get out of them stream.
- NES Godzilla Creepypasta has one in the final chapter where the "FACE" is killed and deformed, with the only message from him being "GET OUT".
- A common meme on TikTok and YouTube is this sound effect
, which is someone yelling the name of this trope word-for-word with the volume cranked to the maximum.
- Used to hilarious effect in hilmdaisy's Metal Gear Portable Ops parody
.
- Nobody Here: "Traces
" has Jogchem write a note to his houseplant, telling it to get out because it moved things around. Then he finds another note behind the cupboard with exactly the same thing written on it.
You dirty sneak! You don't belong here! Get out of my house or else... - Something Awful's GET OUT Frog
.
- A common meme on Tumblr. When one user makes an Incredibly Lame Pun, they are almost always told to get out. In all caps if it was an especially bad pun.
- Ben Drowned: You're not supposed to be here. GET. OUT.
- Blocklanta: While visiting Rico's house, Rico's dad says this to Brady after telling Rico that he's "not sigma".
Rico's dad: Hey, it’s me, Rico’s dad. I don’t want you speaking to my son that way. Get out!
- Counter Monkey: In "Shadowrun: The Code", Spoony talks about a game of Vampire: The Masquerade where one player tried to join as a character who was essentially a child rapist...and volunteered for a "Big Brothers"-type youth outreach program. Assuming he was just trollingnote , Spoony told him to get out; when the guy insisted he seriously wanted to play the character, Spoony responded "Then you're really fucked up and I really want you to get out!"
- Game Grumps: During a playthrough of the video game adaptation of the Dennis the Menace (1993) movie, this is part of a rap improvised by Dan, intended to be sung by Mr. Wilson:
My name is Mr. Wilson, and I'm here to say, I'm gonna smack your ass in a major way! What are you doing in my basement? Get outta here! [Beat] Get outta here!
- In The Irate Gamer review of Monster Party, there is a Running Gag of people ringing his doorbell and asking him for directions to a big Halloween party he was not invited to. The third costumed partygoer that asks for directions results in IG yelling "GET DA FUCK OFF MAH PROPERTY!" at him as he slams the door in his face, causing the partygoer to call him a dick.
- JonTron: Subverted a bit; Jontron says that most people, when playing Takeshi's Challenge would be like "Outta this house! Outta this house! Spirits, begone from this house!" while trying to exorcise it, but he keeps going.
- The Nostalgia Critic screams this to everyone who admits
they have seen a Twilight movie.
- One Take: James meets his father applying for a job at his company. He immediately tells his father to get out, before flying into a rage.
- When Chuggaaconroy made yet another Incredibly Lame Pun at the end of one of The Runaway Guys' videos, ProtonJon made a joke about him having to leave the house. Then he actually did. Made for one of the funniest, and most awkward, Let's Play endings in history, as Jon came to realize that he has the power to throw people out of his house.
- Said by Scott The Woz to his party guests in the episode "Homecoming", after the party DJ called the cops on him. Also in "Animal Crossing: amiibo Festival | The Dark Age of Nintendo":
Scott: But we've played the entirety of what [the game] had to offer!
Rex: Didn't we forget the Fruit Path game?
Scott: Get the fuck out of my house. - In UrinatingTree's video on hockey manager Bruce Boudreau
, Tree portrays an imaginary executive of the teams that Boudreau coaches. After another Game 7 loss at home when Boudreau is coaching the Anaheim Ducks, Manager Tree has had enough, firing Boudreau to the sound of buzzers. Also, at the end of the video, Boudreau's losing stats are tallied up, ending with a clip of George Carlin screaming "Get the fuck outta here!"
Tree: You lost another home Game 7!? What the fuck is wrong with you? How many times have we had this conversation? Get out. Get out! Did I stutter, you moribund marshmallow? Out! - In this
YouTube Poop based on Bear in the Big Blue House, Bear opens the door, tells the audience "Get the fuck out of my house!", and then quickly shuts the door again.
- Yu-Gi-Oh! The Abridged Series:
- Marik's Evil Council 3 ends on one of these.
Aleister: So can we do you now?
Marik: Get out of my hotel room! - In the Bonds Beyond Time Abridged Movie:
- Marik's Evil Council 3 ends on one of these.
- Said by Prince Harry to his brother William after the latter "knocked me to the floor" during an argument. Despite William trying to provoke him into retaliating — "Hit me back! You'll feel better if you hit me back!" — Harry refused and simply repeated his order — "Just... leave".
- If you attempt to board a bus or train without paying the fare to ride, or cause trouble while on board, you may find yourself as the subject of this trope. Additionally, with the prevalence of security cameras to catch peoples' faces and send them to the police for identification,note you may also be given Persona Non Grata status either for a certain time period or permanently. Even if not, it's almost a guarantee that that agency will not accommodate you any further for the rest of the day.
- Amtrak has been known to invoke this by kicking people off at random road crossings along the route. This is usually only done on the long-distance trains where stations are few and far in between. Even if you are kicked off at a station, don't expect the station staff or the next train to accommodate you. And if you're kicked off before your intended stop, don't expect a refund!

