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Cquote1
"Have you ever had the experience of really flying? Feel it now."
—Peter Pan, Hook
Cquote2


What do you do if your boss decides that you're on call 24/7? Well, if this happens after you've discovered What's Really Important (hint: it's never getting ahead or making more money), then you should simply dispose of your cell phone, preferably by throwing it into the nearest body of water. Never mind that it would be a little easier (and far less expensive) to just turn your phone off.

However, throwing it into the water is a lot more dramatic and it symbolizes your "liberation". This may mean you're quitting that oppressive job for good, but you could also just be temporarily shirking your occupational responsibilities in favor of What's Really Important, which is never EVER your career or paying the bills, because money is always unarguably evil.

Related to Ring Ring CRUNCH and Shoot the Television, but not quite the same thing. Compare Removing the Earpiece.

Examples of Cutting the Electronic Leash include:


Anime[]

  • Welcome to The NHK: Satou's upperclassman drops her cellphone into the sea as they travel towards mass suicide on an island.
  • In Real Bout High School, Kyoichi Kunugi crushes his cell phone in his hand after being informed by his employers that if he doesn't cooperate with them his family will be killed. Of course, that was an act of rage rather than an attempt to free himself, and he did go ahead with his boss' plans, if grudgingly.
  • In Code Geass, during Lelouch's Heroic BSOD in response to Nunnally being viceroy of Area 11, he snaps his cell phone in half and throws it out the window of a moving monorail.

Commercials[]

  • A Corona beer commercial had a person relaxing on the beach skipping rocks. The pager on the table starts making noise, and so they casually skip the pager into the ocean. Another Corona commercial has a pan across a beach to a man sitting back on a chair with a Corona Light and settles on his cell phone while the slogan "Miles away from ordinary" [1] is dubbed over the screen. His cell phone? It has no service, letting us believe he walked all the way down the beach to a place with no service instead of, y'know, finding a quiet spot and just turning it off.
    • There was a Corona ad here in Mexico a few years ago that had a similar theme, but it was a lot more subtle. It was a shot of a guy in a poolchair (only the arm is visible), and next to him, on a little table, there's a cellphone and an ice-cold Corona. The phone is ringing and the guy just ignores it, taking the beer bottle instead. Placid beach waves and the phone ringing are the only soundtrack.
      • There is yet another one where the phone gets casually dropped in the water.
  • Subverted, obviously but nicely, in a Motorola ad. A forty-something man starts getting rid of all his material wealth: he tears off his necklace, drops his watch, and throws his diamond ring in the street. But when it comes to his Motorola phone... of course, he keeps it!

Film[]

  • Occurs at the end of The Devil Wears Prada.
  • At the end of Hook, Robin Williams rediscovers the phone his wife had thrown out the window earlier in the movie. He then tosses it back out the window himself.
  • Occurs humorously in Wild Hogs. The three main characters are going on a mid-life crisis road trip, one brags about how his phone has a GPS so they won't get lost, and his friend takes it away and throws it in a fountain. In retaliation, the first takes his phone away and tosses it. Not to be outdone by the other's expressions of freedom, the third (perpetually unlucky) friend tosses his - right onto the windshield of a semi truck. A semi truck with a very large and unhappy driver.
  • Cypher throws his cell into the trash in The Matrix. This, combined with his talk to Smith early on, is basically a signal that he's no longer working for the Resistance and has sold out to the Machines. That, and he leaves it on when he chucks it; the Agents use this to trace their location.
    • Mind you, throwing away your cell phone pretty much SOP for Neo and Co, if the line is being traced and they need a clean cell. In Cypher's case, he called the Agents and left the phone outside the building that Neo and co. were going to use as their exit, allowing the Agents to set their trap.
  • Nancy in Enchanted, after hanging a lampshade on how a cell phone still gets reception in a magical fairytale kingdom.
  • In the Russian movie Irony of Fate: Continuation, Irakliy (a manager in a cell phone company) is nagged by phone calls throughout the entire film. In the end, he gives it to a random kid as a New Year gift.
  • A pre-cellphone era example occurs in The Man In The Santa Claus Suit, when an overworked political speechwriter finally destroys his pager.
  • In The Terminal, Tom Hanks and Catherine Zeta Jones throw their pagers onto an airport runway.
  • In For Your Eyes Only, James Bond leaves his communicator watch on a perch with a parrot, who then drops it into the ocean. Not that Bond was quitting; it's just that having a Two-Person Pool Party was a damn sight more interesting than talking to the Prime Minister.
  • In Identity Theft: The Michelle Brown Story, identity thief Connie Volkos flushes her cell phone down a toilet when the detective handling her victim's case calls and offers to help her if she turns herself in. (Since she's committing ID theft mostly to lead a better life than the desperate one she's led so far.)
  • In Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children, Tifa points out that although Cloud doesn't answer his phone, he never Cuts the Electronic Leash either. Later on, though, he loses the phone in a fight.
  • In Broken Arrow 1996 Deakin (played by john Travolta) used an electric shaver to simulate static noice in order to break off the communication via radio.

Live Action TV[]

  • Thirty Rock: Jack and C.C. do this in "Episode 210".
  • In Alias, Sydney Bristow, at the edge of breakdown, reacts to a call from her boss at SD-6 by tossing her cell phone. Vaughn notes, "You just threw your cell phone into the Pacific." They both have a good chuckle.
    • Eerily echoed in Season 5, when Sydney is caught in a Lotus Eater Machine and she throws the same phone away, twice in a row.
  • Also happened in the UK version of Queer as Folk: Vince had a date and kept nattering on the phone to various people who were bugging him and Cameron grabbed the phone and tossed it into the canal. This is a slightly different angle because it wasn't Vince's work that the phone represented so much as his willingness to let other people use him (so Cameron grabbing the phone was his way of saying "be selfish for once in your life").
  • In the Star Trek series this doubles as an Insignia Rip Off Ritual: a crewmember decides to do what must be done and puts aside his or her communicator (it's even more of an electronic leash than a cellphone, since the communicators are also tracking devices.)
    • Cellphones are also tracking devices whenever they're on, otherwise the network wouldn't know which base station's cell you're in. Of course, most people don't have their coordinates being relayed to family or coworkers.
  • Done on UK sketch show Smack the Pony: A character throws her phone into a lake. She immediately regrets it and goes into the water to look for it.
  • In Dollhouse, Victor's imprint throws away DeWitt's phone for her, as she tells him how often she's complained about how slippery it is.
  • Used at the end of one of the episodes of the (short-lived) revival of Fantasy Island from 1997. The man who has realized that neither getting ahead in business nor reliving his own childhood is not as important as spending time with his son throws his cellphone into the ocean. Of course, this being Fantasy Island, Mr. Rourke retrieves it from his fish tank (providing a sensible alternative to the usual version of this trope.)
  • On I Love Lucy, Lucy keeps getting interrupted by the phone when she's trying to tell Ricky she's pregnant (excuse me, "'spectin'"), so she finally throws away the receiver, saying, "Darn that thing!"
  • In Scrubs, when JD thought that Dr. Cox didn't care about him any more, he threw away his pager. By the end of the show, Dr. Cox finds it and returns it to him lobs it and makes him fetch it, berating him all the while. JD is elated at this turn of events.
  • In the UK version of The Office, Tim takes off his microphone (to pick up his speech, as per the Mockumentary setting) in order to presumably admit his feelings to Dawn.
  • Has happened a few times on Home and Away. Romeo threw his into the Pacific, while Roo put her SIM card in a cup of coffee.
  • Averted in NCIS; Gibbs often damages his cell phone, but this is portrayed as a character flaw, a part of his somewhat curmudgeonly ways. On one occasion, he breaks his phone, hands it to one of his subordinates to fix, and they replace it with one of the several identical phones they keep in a drawer. By contrast, McGee is depicted as sometimes being overreliant on technological solutions.
  • Ultraviolet. The expensive cell-phone of one character is seen thrown into a trash bin, as a sign that he's become a vampire (the voice of a vampire can't travel over a phone line).

Music[]

  • A song by Cake is completely devoted to this.
    • "No phone, no phone. I just want to be alone today..."
  • Done in the music video to "Walk" by the Foo Fighters.

Video Game[]

  • Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater does this in the ending, where EVA throws Snake's ringing radio (on which he's been getting calls about his mission entire game) into the fire, and Snake, rather than protesting like he normally would, proceeds to....well, the two have a very interesting night together.

Web Original[]

  • Cloe does it at the end of The Secret Dancer, though with a walkie-talkie. Bonus points for having the battery case fly off as it hits the floor.

Western Animation[]

  • Charlotte does this at the end of The Rugrats Movie, but she doesn't abandon her job. It's just that her reunification with her lost daughter takes precedence.

Real Life[]

  • Several religious and secular movements and even some health specialists (including those not specializing in mental health) have advocated periods of isolation from communication networks, with reasons including realignment with some higher power, stress relief or reducing dependency (psychological or otherwise). Of course, the concession is often made that such sessions should be scheduled to avoid clashing with the rest of one's affairs and those that might need to make contact should be informed that one will be unreachable.
  1. (note: may not be the actual slogan.)
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