What's In It For Me? - TV Tropes
- ️Sun Jun 26 2011
This is a Stock Phrase used when questioning the benefit to oneself of doing something one is asked to do, often implying that self-interest can make or break their decision, or at least serve as a tiebreaker.
And even when it's asked and answered to satisfaction, they might ask Dude, Where's My Reward?, since they might end up doing the job and not get paid.
Example:
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Films — Live-Action
- Agent Cody Banks: Cody attempts to leave for a mission, but his little brother (whom he just told him was a "junior agent") reminds him he's grounded. Cody then offers him to be a "junior junior agent" (to let him go on his mission). The usual line comes, then cut to Cody leaving the house, then to his little brother with a considerable amount of allowance money.
- Bugs Bunny's Bustin' Out All Over
Bugs: Eh, what's in it for me to be "vewy, vewy quiet"?
Elmer: Well, uh, gee. I, uh, I don't know. I, uh, I didn't know I had to pay for quiet. Uh, how 'bout a nickel?
Bugs: AHA! Tryin' to bribe me, eh? That, sir, is contributing to the delinquency of a minor!
- Templeton uses this frequently in Charlotte's Web. It's a repeated theme in the movie that he's repeatedly answered with something that really IS in it for him, and in turn, Templeton frequently does the right thing for the wrong reasons.
- Dazed and Confused
Freshman Girl: Will you marry me?
Dawson: I don't know. What's in it for me?
- Escape from L.A.
Hershe Las Palmas: What's in it for me?
Snake Plissken: I know that voice. You're Carjack Malone.
- Ella Enchanted
Edgar: So, Ella of Frell is your sister. [snip] Tell me, what do you know about her?
Hattie: What's in it for me?
Heston: How about that your eyeballs remain inside your head?
- Escape 2000
Strike: [about the kidnapping plan] Hey wait a minute, wait a minute, what's in it for me?
Moon Grey: That's simple. If they want their president back, they have to put things back the way the were.
Trash: The Bronx will be back in the hands of the gangs, which means you'll go back to being the number one man for all the big robberies.
- Kiss Me Deadly
Lt. Murphy: Mike, why don't you tell us what you know? Then step aside like a nice fella and let us do our job.
Mike Hammer: What's in it for me?
- In The Transformers: The Movie, after the nearly-dead Megatron is thrown into the depths of space by Starscream, he is "rescued" by Unicron, who commands him to destroy the Matrix of Leadership. Megatron's reaction is predictable:
Megatron: Why should I? What's in it for me?
Unicron: Your bargaining posture is highly dubious...but very well. I will provide you with a new body, and new troops to command.
Megatron: And?
Unicron: And nothing! You belong to me now!
- Anamaria's first line in Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl is an angry response to Jack trying to rally up a crew ("What's the benefit for us?"). The benefit ends up being a beautiful ship.
- This is a recurring question Macha keeps asking in Revolver (2005), as show his insatiable greed. He even lectures others on importance of always getting something out of any given deal, no matter how small, just to show that you're the boss.
Literature
- The Truth. William De Worde has published information in his newspaper about Lord Vetinari's apparently committing a murder, much to Commander Vimes' distress. Vimes asks him: (1) not to bleed too much when someone attacks him over what he wrote (2) not to ask Watch personnel about the case and (3) not interfere with the investigation.
De Worde: I'll remember. But, if you don't mind my asking, what's in it for me?
- George R. R. Martin's Haviland Tuf short story "A Beast for Norn". After Tuf sells fighting animals to each of the 12 Great Houses of the planet Lyronica, the last buyer tells him that either Tuf will leave the planet or he'll be killed. Tuf responds "I am easily distracted and I may have failed to hear the part wherein you explained the incentive you will offer me for acceding to your request to deal no more with the Great Houses of Lyronica." The buyer offers him a huge sum of money in compensation, and Tuf agrees.
- In The Hot Gate, the subject of personal benefit from cooperating with one another comes up in a conversation between "Comet" Parker and one of the engineers for the 143rd.
Live-Action TV
- True Blood episode "Never Let Me Go". Eric is dying when a boy appears.
Eric Northman: What are you waiting for? Kill me.
Godric: Could you be a companion of death? Could you walk with me through the world? Through dark? I'll teach you all I know. I'll be your father, your brother, your child.
Eric Northman: What is in it for me?
Godric: What you love most... life.
- Gossip Girl episode "Chuck in Real Life"
Blair Waldorf: I have a proposition for you. [snip] Dan stole your best friend, now you can steal his. Seduce and destroy.
Chuck Bass: What's in it for me?
Blair Waldorf: The thrill of the impossible. The only person Vanessa loathes more than me is you. It'll be one for the ages.
- Prison Break episode "Fire/Water"
Brad Bellick: Why are you so interested in that guy in the sewer?
Michael Scofield: No reason.
Brad Bellick: Then why are you whispering, college boy?
Michael Scofield: Why don't you lower your voice already?
Brad Bellick: What's in it for me?
- Psych episode "A Very Juliet Episode"
Shawn Spencer: Could you ask those people to *not* do those things to Scott?
J.T. Waring: Perhaps. What's in it for me?
- Leverage episode "The Nigerian Job"
Eliot Spencer: What's in it for me?
Nathan Ford: Payback. And if it goes right, a lot of money.
Parker: And what's in it for me?
Nathan Ford: A lot of money. And if it goes right, payback.
- The Mighty Boosh
Naboo: What's in it for me?
Dixon Bainbridge: I don't know. How about I throw in a Kit Kat?
- Monarch of the Glen episode #1.5
Katrina: If you're still looking for a bottling plant, I know of one going cheap.
Archie: Where?
Katrina: Put it this way - what's in it for me?
- Road to Avonlea episode "The Dinner"
Felicity King: Mother and Father are going off to the White Sands tomorrow night and I'm babysitting. [snip] If you make yourself scarce, I won't tell if you won't. [snip]
Felix King: What's in it for me?
- Lovejoy episode "One Born Every Minute"
Whiteman: We'd like you to do something for us, Lovejoy.
Lovejoy: What's in it for me? I don't work for God, Queen, or country... only for cash!
- Blackadder The Third episode "Duel and Duality"
Blackadder: I want you to take the place of the Prince Regent and kill the Duke of Wellington in a duel.
Mad McAdder: Aye, and what's in it for me?
Blackadder: Enough cash to buy the Outer Hebrides. What do you think?
Mad McAdder: Fourteen shillings and six-pence? Well, it's tempting.
- Wanted: Dead or Alive episode "Estralita''
Josh Randall: What's in it for me?
Estralita: My gratitude.
Josh Randall: Well, kind of a hard thing to spend.
Estralita: So are a lot of worthwhile things.
- Wiseguy. During the Garment Trade arc, a Chinese-American activist trying to unionise sweatshop workers delivers the line straight when she's pretending to be open for bribery (she's actually wearing a Hidden Wire).
- The Equalizer. McCall is up against a slum landlord and tries to get the help of a business rival who was forced out of a lucrative deal due to threats the landlord made against his family. He rejects the idea of helping McCall out of altruism claiming, "I was born without a social conscience." McCall points out that revenge might be more to his taste.
- Lost Girl. A variation when Kenzi first suggests to Bo that they team up. Bo asks what's in it for Kenzi; the latter points out that Bo's superpower makes her the biggest kid on the block, so it's a good survival strategy for Kenzi to make friends with her.
- Mussolini: Son of the Century. Hardline fascist Cesare Forni is disgusted with Mussolini throwing open their ranks to anyone willing to swear loyalty to him, and threatens to form a Renegade Splinter Faction of true Fascists. Mussolini sounds him out and when he gives this trope, thinks he's open to bribery and offers Cesare a well-paid position as a colonial inspector with a Big Fancy House, a general's salary and randy native servant girls. Cesare pretends to play along for a moment, then scornfully rejects the offer, seeing it as another sign of his leader's corruption.
- Lampshaded in Pennyworth when an upper-class British Army officer demands that Colonel Salt—who's lower-middle class but currently has the ear of Lord Harwood—smooth the way for him to make an appeal to release Dr. Frances Gaunt, currently detained on charges of treason. Given that Salt secretly engineered her arrest he's not inclined to help the snobbish twit, but can hardly say so. Instead Salt brings up this trope and gets the condescending reply: "What's in it for you? My good opinion of you. I should think that's worth something."
Music
- "What's In It for Me" by John Berry:
What's in it for me
I've got to ask
If it's only more tears
Then I'll have to pass
If you'll open up
Then I can see
Deep in your heart
What's in it for me
Newspaper Comic
- An early Dilbert comic has Dogbert meet some aliens who promise to share the secrets to ending hunger, poverty, and disease. Dogbert replies with the trope name and the aliens leave the planet in response. Dogbert walks away wondering whether there was a better way to handle that.
Other
- Big Finish Doctor Who. Played for Black Comedy in "Spare Parts" when the Doctor gets the help of an amoral black market organ dealer by promising one of his hearts.
Video Games
- Dawn of War 2: Retribution: Space Pirate Bluddflagg asks this of Adrastia when she reveals she wants to use him as Hired Guns to kill a renegade space marine. After pointing out that giving him money (which Bluddflagg can't use) is pointless, and giving him guns is even moreso as he'd inevitably just use them on her, Adrastia offers Bluddflagg a good fight by letting him and his crew fight a set battle against two Imperial regiments. Bluddflagg accepts, on the condition he also gets Adrastia's hat in the bargain. Negotiations immediately break down.
Western Animation
- The Super Hero Squad Show episode "Invader from the Dark Dimension"
Dr. Strange: Dr. Doom, I have a proposition for you. Since we helped your headquarters from Iron Menace, help us defeat him.
Dr. Doom: Really? What's in it for me?
Silver Surfer: I know. How about a plate of fungus and ragweed burgers? Yummy in the tummy.
Dr. Doom: I'll help only if you keep him from ever cooking again.
- Top Cat offers to help Officer Dibble keep an eye out for a jewel thief in "Rafeefleas." T.C. asks what's in it for him and his gang.
Dibble: I'll tell you what's in it. If we don't catch this thief, I'll be transferred. And you'll get one of those eager beaver rookies who walk softly and carry a big stick! (waves his billy club in T.C.'s face)
- The Hair Bear Bunch asks this to Professor Rockabuilt in "No Space Like Home," after being proposed the plan of landing a spaceship on Mars. The Professor promises a hero's welcome, a ticker tape parade, an invitation to the White House and a phone call from the President. His evil laugh before the bears blast off indicate ulterior motives (saying earlier he wants to reap a fortune from Mars' natural resources).
- K'nuckles from The Marvelous Misadventures of Flapjack manages to make this question even more selfish than usual when asked by Dr. Barber to mind his shop while he is away since Flapjack is asked along with him and only tries at the last second with his trademark lack of subtlety to replace me with ...I mean US.
- In the Hey Arnold! episode "Oscar Can't Read", this trope involves Oscar and Chocolate Boy when Oscar needed Chocolate Boy to read the first page of "A Tale of Two Cities" until Oscar can memorize it.
Oscar: I need someone to read me the first page of this book again and again until I can memorize it.
Chocolate Boy: What's in it for me? (Scene cuts to Chocolate Boy reading the book while eating a bag of malted milk balls, courtesy of Oscar) "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times."
Oscar: (Repeats) "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times."
- Family Guy: Peter as a response to spending time with his children!
Peter: Well, what's in it for ol' Pete?
- Danger Mouse: In "The Great Bone Idol," Baron Greenback hires Count Duckula to find said idol, with which he plans to control every dog in the world:
Duckula: Listen, suppose I should agree. How will I benefit? What will I receive?
Greenback: How about...Australia?
Duckula: Australia? Bondi Beach...Woolloomooloo...Kangaroo stew! Yes...done! - In the Timon & Pumbaa episode "Saskatchewan Catch", Timon and Pumbaa get into this trope with a female flying squirrel named Piper.
'"Timon:"' Would you please fly up to the tipity-tip top of these dangerously high trees and shake down a few hundred beetles for us? We're starved.
'"Pumbaa:"' Famished, even.
'"Piper:"' What's in it for me?
'"Piper:"' (Grabs Timon) Well you want something, so do I. The one elusive thing I desire for so long is... him. (Points to male flying squirrel flying in the sky singing)