A Day in Her Apron/Playing With

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    Basic Trope: A wife leaves her domestic duties to her husband as a challenge.

    • Played Straight: Bob makes an insensitive remark about how Alice's job as a homemaker isn't "real" work. She leaves him in charge for the day, and Bob proves the trope Men Can't Keep House true.
    • Exaggerated: The house is practically destroyed when Alice comes back.
    • Downplayed: Bob does okay for the most part, but he just doesn't do housework as well as Alice.
    • Inverted: Alice is challenged (perhaps in addition to Bob looking after the house) to go to his work for the day.
      • Bob the House Husband challenges Alice the Career Woman to take care of the house; Alice learns that homemaking is every bit as much real work as her job is.
      • Bob does Alice's housework for the day and finds out it's as easy as he thought.
    • Justified: This is a challenge to prove that homemaking is real work, and not nearly as easy as it sounds.
    • Subverted: Bob seems to be managing the house alright while Alice is gone.
    • Double Subverted: But then the baby starts crying, and the roast burns in the oven, and chaos generally breaks loose.
    • Parodied: The house is in shambles as soon as Alice walks out the door.
    • Deconstructed: Because Bob is so inept at housekeeping, he ends up burning the house down and leaving them homeless.
    • Reconstructed: Alice and Bob find another home, which Bob promises to take better care of.
    • Lampshaded: "Oh, everything's fine dear...no, no that wasn't the fire extinguisher..."
    • Averted: Bob manages to hold down the house while Alice is gone.
    • Enforced: "Let's give 'em An Aesop about respecting the work done by an average Housewife!"
    • Invoked: Alice and Bob get into a Cavemen Versus Astronauts Debate about whose work is harder, who contributes more to the household, etc.
    • Defied: See "Reconstructed" without even using this trope.
      • Alice and Bob agree that they both work equally hard (if in different ways) and contribute equally to the running of the household.
    • Discussed: "Haha, Bob's gonna fail!"
    • Conversed: "Why can't Alice and Bob see that they both contribute a lot to the household?"
    • Played For Laughs: Almost always is.
    • Played For Drama: The argument becomes Serious Business that threatens their marriage.