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Turn Off the Camera

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Turn Off the Camera (trope)

"Hey, you nutcase. Put that camera down and get this lady to a hospital! TV news... sheesh!"

Someone being filmed rushes to stop the filming, for one of several reasons:

Something to Hide: The Corrupt Corporate Executive, rock star or other celebrity on a TV show is asked a rather uncomfortable question, and doesn't want to damn himself in front of thousands of witnesses armed with video recorders.

Blocking The Fourth Wall: This covers all the other times, when the person just wants the camera crew to stop sticking a camera in his face.

Have Some Decency: Rarer is when it's an offence to human decency - it's not something that should be filmed and used as entertainment.

Very much Truth in Television. Compare Film the Hand. Might be a reaction to Are We Getting This?, a nearby news reporter or filming crew trying to videotape an unexpected, extraordinary event.


Examples:

    open/close all folders 

Something to Hide:

    Comic Books 
  • Played for laughs in The Transformers: More than Meets the Eye. Rewind wants to make a documentary about the Lost Light crew, but in order to get permission to do so he must agree to let Ultra Magnus edit it before release. Any footage of Magnus doing something embarrassing ends up replaced with a card explaining that it was removed.
  • Robin: A reality TV show host makes the mistake of trying to film Robin taking out some criminals after being told not to. Tim sneakily grabs the tape on his way out and the man doesn't even realize it's gone until later.

    Fan Works 

    Films 
  • Diary of the Dead. The protagonist are stopped at a National Guard checkpoint and a soldier tells the POV cameraman to turn off his camera in a threatening manner. We then cut to after the soldiers have left, and it's revealed they are Dangerous Deserters who stole some of their supplies.
  • After Velma von Tussle in Hairspray reveals that she stuffed the ballot boxes to make her daughter win, Edna Turnblad pulls her attention to a large film camera that has been capturing her every word. She desperately tries to block the camera and yell at the cameraman to cut the feed before her boss calls her back to fire her.
  • Venom (2018): Big Bad Carlton Drake has his security crew abruptly end an interview when Eddy Brock goes off-script to ask about his Research, Inc. company secretly conducting unethical human experimentation.
  • Predator 2. When Keyes catches shock journalist Pope filming the Predator's latest crime scene, he has one of his mooks confiscate his camera. As Pope is lead off amid loud protests, you can see him secretly brace a smaller handheld camera against the back of the man holding him, getting some shots that he later uses in a report.
  • T-34: When the war game between Hitlerjugend tankers and Russian prisoners of war in a "deactivated" T-34 end with the Russians blowing stuff up and escaping the grounds of the camp, Standardenfuhrer Jaeger empties his pistol at the fleeing tank, then turns to the soldiers filming the scene and angrily tells them to cut the camera.

    Live-Action TV 
  • On 30 Rock Liz Lemon and Tracy Jordan go through gymnastics trying to keep their feuding off Angie's reality show.
  • A variation in NCIS: A news network makes it look like Gibbs is pulling this in response to a question regarding a supermodel's death on a Marine base; in reality, Gibbs was never asked the question, and he only ended the interview because a reporter spilled his coffee.
  • Torchwood: Children of Earth. The aliens known as 456 do this at one point, saying they want their conversation "Off the record" (an Ironic Echo of an earlier request for a private conversation).

    Video Games 
  • Road 96: When filming the Minister of Oil’s address at a new pump for Sonya, the hitchhiker can turn the camera to film the protesters being beaten up by the cops. When she notices this, Sonya strides in front of the camera with her hand out and says that they do not film things like that.

    Web Animation 
  • Red vs. Blue: The episode "Fight the Good Fight!" is a Stylistic Suck army recruitment ad, meant to lure people into joining the Red vs Blue simulation war. The narrator stops filming twice, once when Grif asked about the aliens and the Freelancers, and a second time when he asks why they're supposed to hate the Blues again.

    Western Animation 
  • Daria: The episode "Monster" has Daria and Jane filming Quinn for a school project. At one point, they catch her discussing visible pores with the rest of the Fashion Club, which leads Quinn to freak out about them possibly zooming in on her skin to look for blemishes. She eventually does the obligatory shove of the camera, turning its feed into static.

    Real Life 
  • Used by the CEO of Little Chef when Heston Blumenthal confronted him about his "nationwide" rollout of Heston's new menu... over three cafés.
  • In the 1987 Four Corners documentary "The Moonlight State" that exposed government and police-protected gambling and prostitution in Queensland, Australia, one alleged underworld figure famously responded to being confronted on camera by ordering his men to; "Break his camera and break his mouth too!"

Blocking the Fourth Wall:

    Films — Live-Action 
  • This is also used in Mockumentary Blair Witch-type movies, and the cameraman always has some feeble answer, like "People will want to know" or "It keeps me sane," to justify the inevitable payoff of his 1st-person death scene.
  • In the fictional documentary "Under the Hood", part of the Watchmen movie universe, the Comedian says to get the camera out of his face, and the voiceover says he is unavailable for comment.
  • Brock Lovett says it in Titanic, after failing to find the diamond in the safe at the beginning of the film.
  • Played with for a Mind Screw effect in The NIN9S during the "Reality Television" segment, which shows parts of an in-universe documentary series about the creation of a TV show. After having fallen out with Melissa McCarthy over replacing her as the star of his show, writer/show runner Gavin storms out onto the street and tells the camera man that he isn't doing the reality show anymore. The Mind Screw comes in the form of Octavia Spencer looking toward the camera and asking, "Who are you talking to?" Gavin looks at where the camera man had been; the audience still sees him from the camera's perspective, but nobody is there.

    Live-Action TV 
  • It was said by Bree in an episode of Desperate Housewives, after she tried decorating a croquembouche on a TV interview and failed miserably. Specifically, she said, "Turn off the damn camera."
  • Appears in Reality Show outtakes when someone is upset. Probably after someone says, "I'm Not Here to Make Friends".
  • On Top Gear's Polar Special, Clarkson tells May to turn off the in-car camera just after they've hit a large ice block and are getting out to look at the damage, presumably to make room for a whole heckuva lot of profanity.

    Western Animation 
  • Meg Griffin from Family Guy says it once she's had her fill of the family's reality show.

Have Some Decency:

    Films — Live-Action 
  • In Die Hard 2, the reporter pushes the camera down when the McClanes reunite, partly to highlight that she is better than the guy from the first movie.
  • Snake Eyes: When the Secretary of Defense is assassinated at a major boxing event, photographers immediately swarm over the site. Detective Rick Santoro punches out one of them and tells the guards to get the rest removed from the crime scene.
  • The Dead Pool. Dirty Harry destroys a TV camera to stop them filming the grieving girlfriend of a murder victim, but to no avail as it was transmitting a video signal. To avoid a lawsuit, he has to bring the reporter in on the case. However the reporter later tells her cameraman to stop filming a man who wants to set himself on fire as a protest, so Harry is able to start Talking Down the Suicidal.
  • What We Do in the Shadows: Vladislav does this after Petyr dies.
    Vladislav: Our friend has just been killed in a fatal sunlight accident!

    Live-Action TV 
  • Cobra Kai: "Eunjangdo" ends with Gunther begging the Sekai Taikai cameramen to cut the feed after everyone witnesses Kwon fall upon his own blade.
  • Shakespeare & Hathaway - Private Investigators: In the pilot episode, "A Brave New World", Luella Shakespeare angrily brushes away the videographer who was hired to film her wedding, which has ended with her husband being murdered and her being arrested for the crime.
  • Used in the Stargate SG-1 episode "Heroes" when Dr. Frasier dies.
  • Done on a season 9 episode of The Office (US) by the sound guy (who got in trouble for it later) when Pam started crying after a big argument with Jim.

    Theme Parks 
  • In the queue video for The Amazing Adventures of Spider-Man at Universal Studios, after Spider-Man sees that a news station is filming him rescuing an injured woman, he tells him to put the camera down and get the lady to a hospital, before promptly webs-out the camera lens.

    Video Games 
  • In the flashback where Johnny Silverhand tries and fails to save Alt from Arasaka in Cyberpunk 2077 (due primarily to Johnny not realizing that disconnecting Alt would kill her), Thompson, the media guy who accompanied him and the others into Mikoshi, ends up the recipient of a savage beatdown when he films Alt's dead body a little too long for Johnny's liking.

    Western Animation 
  • In the original series finale of Beavis and Butt-Head, a stressed-out Principal McVicker collapses in front of the school and the media after learning the titular duo were alive and fighting over a coin jar. While the camera crew continues filming this, Coach Buzzcut angrily pushes the camera away, declares that he's not dead and begins to deliver CPR. While his fate is left ambiguous here, both reboots show him alive and well (at least comparatively.)
  • Rex from Generator Rex, stops a camera crew from filming a family after he's unable to turn one of them back into a human, arguing that he agreed to be filmed but they did not.

    Real Life 
  • Invoked by Terry Pratchett in a BBC documentary about his Alzheimer disease.
  • Can be heard happening in Real Life when R. Budd Dwyer infamously ended a press conference in 1987 by shooting himself while cameras rolled.

 
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