
The quartet of prisoners first seen in "The Finale" (the butter knife, the green goblin, the dolphin-bird hybrid, and the can of spray-paint) have also been seen as repo men and as businessmen.In "The Founder", the gray one works at Chanax. "The Authority", "The Wicked", The Bros, The Brain, The Diet, and "The Anybody" shows the mini-figs as firemen. A trio of men who look like LEGO mini-figs are seen working construction all around town, possibly working for Patrick, who owns a construction firm.Three identical looking ones including John and Al work at Chanax in "The Founder". In "The Routine," them (or orge-like versions of them) work as the tollbooth operators. In "The Spoiler," John was wiretapping on Gumball and Penny's phone call about The Screamening. Sometimes there's shown to be several of the same guy, just differently colored. There are two slightly different-looking orange men, one named John, shown working security at numerous different locations, mostly the large grocery store that the Wattersons shop at.A cupcake man named Martin Peaches also works at the bank and Chanax. An elderly cupcake woman has screened candidates for testing cosmetics ("The DVD"), assisted people seeking employment ("The Mustache"), worked at the Justice Department informing the Watterson of a class-action lawsuit against them ("The Finale"), and worked at the town hall ("The Signature") and the bank (The Understanding).In "The Butterfly," she was shown working the desk at the Elmore Crisis Center, in "The Limit," she was the "free sample" clerk at the grocery store, and in "The Love", she's a Burger Fool at Joyful Burger. Karen, Larry's girlfriend, has been seen working as a grocery store sale associate, office worker (at several different companies), and civil servant.Rocky does most school jobs that's aren't teaching or administrative positions, like the janitor/groundskeeper, the bus driver, cafeteria worker, and the lost and found clerk.In "The Finale", Larry tells Nicole and Anais that because of the damage the Wattersons cause coming of his paycheck, he has to take so many jobs, but in "The Schooling", he tells Gumball and Darwin that he takes many jobs because he was a dropout student and couldn't get a single well-paying one. Season four pretty much took the idea that he works the majority of Elmore's businesses and ran with it, as "The Gift" shows Larry as a messenger and an art museum curator, "The Check" showed him as a bank clerk, and "The Girlfriend" has him as a minister during Gumball's vision of his marriage to Jamie and Darwin. "The Nobody" parodied this by having Gumball suggest a bunch of jobs to take while multiple Larrys walk by corresponding to whichever vocation was just mentioned. "The Pizza" reveals that Larry has more jobs than that (roadside car repairman, head of pest control, police station accountant, etc) and, without him, the town's economy plunges and everything turns apocalyptic. Larry can be cashier or clerk, usually for the video store, the pizzeria, the supermarket, or the gas station.New Job as the Plot Demands: Larry, Rocky, and a number of Recurring Extras fill different jobs depending on what is needed for a scene:.However, baby Anais is hellbent on killing Gumball and Darwin so that she can get her parents' attention all the time. New Baby Episode: "The Rival" is a Whole Episode Flashback about Anais being born.The use of the word in a direct reference to the act of killing someone was avoided until later episodes. As of Season 4, "kill" became slightly more common but only in contexts such as killing a virtual snake creature in what Richard believes to be a video game ("The Uploads"), killing someone's appetite ("The Origins"), or as part of the saying "What doesn't kill you makes you stronger" in a song ("The Advice")."The Origins" two-parter also eschews directly saying that the goldfish Gumball had before Darwin are dead, opting instead for euphemisms and implications."The Friend" has the Chimera describing that he became homeless after the toymaker who created him died, but instead of directly using the term, he describes it as "the day he never woke up".Especially noticeable in "Halloween": we see many ghosts, some of them coming out of their graves, but they are never referred to as "dead", only as "spirits" or "from the underworld". Carrie the ghost mentions her "afterlife" and having a body before (which itself was subject to a retcon), but never being "dead".Darwin and Gumball frequently make use of the transparent euphemism "iced" in place of "killed".Nature Is Not Nice: The Forest of Doom is a dangerous place filled with hostile monsters, including the squirrels, that has managed to nearly kill Gumball and Darwin every time they've entered it.
