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Fluffy, Not Fat

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I'm not fat. It's all this fur. It makes me look...poofy.
Manny, Ice Age

A Comedy Trope where an animal who appears to be very large gets wet or loses its fur (or hair, feathers, wool, scales, or whatever) in some fashion, revealing that its body is actually rather small underneath. The animal itself may react by blushing, acting embarrassed, or acting like a human whose clothing has suddenly disappeared, while onlookers laugh at the comical sight.

This trope has some basis in Real Life: When threatened, many animals will puff out their fur, feathers, or whatever they have covering their bodies to make themselves look bigger and scare away potential predators or rivals.

Related:

  • Compressed Hair: A large volume of hair can be easily stuffed into something like a hat or hood.
  • Fluffy Dry Cat: The inverted version — when a wet animal is dried, its fur will poof up and make it look huge.
  • Fur Is Clothing: Fur/skin/feathers/scales acting like clothing.
  • I Am Big Boned: A character takes offense to being called fat.

Examples:

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    Anime & Manga 
  • Delicious in Dungeon: Subverted. One of the supplementary comics has Mikbell shaving Kuro on a very hot day, under the guise of helping Kuro cool off, but actually because he thought it would be funny to make Kuro scrawny and hairless (with a thought bubble showing what he thought would happen). He's disturbed to discover Kuro is actually ripped underneath his fur and forces him to put a shirt on (making him even more uncomfortably hot than before).
  • Digimon Ghost Game: Angoramon is a zigzagged example, due to a case of Bizarre Alien Biology with his fluff. On one hand, when wet, he is shown to be thin, and his partner Ruli can wrap her arms around him when hugging him. In other scenes his body looks and acts as if he is as heavy as he looks - getting stuck in small spaces, bounce around, people can cling to his fluff, and the ground quakes with his steps.
  • Pokémon the Series: Sun & Moon: In "I Choose Paradise!", the Ultra Guardians spend a day at a spa resort, and Altaria, well-known for its fluffy, cloud-like wings, gets soaked. Its wings are then shown to be very small and thin compared to their normal appearance.
  • SPY×FAMILY: Bond is a large and fluffy dog. In "Part of the Family," after an adventure saving a puppy from a burning building, his fur catches fire and Loid has to throw water on him. This causes his fur to lose its volume and reveals that he has a skinny body underneath.

    Comedy 
  • Comedian Gabriel Iglesias has said numerous times that he's "not fat, [he's] fluffy." He often refers to other people who share his body type as fluffy, referring to anyone heavier than him as "Damn!" This is why one of this professional nicknames is "Fluffy".

    Comic Strips 
  • Garfield: In one strip, Jon tells Garfield he can eat once he has lost some weight. Garfield leaves the room and comes back hairless, skinny, and holding a shaver, much to Jon's shock.
    Garfield: Let's eat.

    Films — Animated 
  • Ice Age: Sid calls Manny "fat," but Manny insists that it's his fur making him look "poofy." Sid is apparently unconvinced and says Manny has "fat hair."
  • Open Season: Zigzagged — Boog weighs 900 pounds, but a Running Gag is people thinking he's actually 1,200 pounds, to his annoyance. He claims that he looks 100 pounds heavier due to his fur, but also that he's gaining weight to hibernate.

    Literature 
  • The Rising of the Shield Hero: Filo is a filolial queen, much larger and apparently rounder than the average filolial. But most of her bulk is revealed to be feathers when Princess Melty is able to bury her whole body in Filo's down and vanish from sight.

    Video Games 
  • Palworld: Exaggerated with Wumpo, a large, yeti-like Pal whose entire body is nothing but hair. When some researchers caught one and tried to shave it, there was nothing underneath, and they ended up with a pile of lifeless hair.
  • Pokémon: Hatterene is a nearly 7-foot-tall Pokémon who resembles a tall, beautiful woman, but most of her "body" is actually her long hair. Her real body is very small and thin underneath, and looks like this.
  • Splatoon: Judd the cat's head and body look rather fat, but stage introduction banter from the first game speaks of a time he fell in a pool and revealed he's quite thin under his fur.

    Web Animation 
  • Simon's Cat: The eponymous cat usually appears somewhat plump, but in one video, he gets wet, and it's revealed that he's actually skinny.

    Web Original 
  • Ask Fluffle Puff: Fluffle Puff looks like a big round ball of pink fluff. On one occasion when she ended up in a full-body cast after an incident with some Fourth of July fireworks, it revealed that she has a pony-sized and -shaped body underneath.

    Western Animation 
  • Abby Hatcher: In "Grumbles Goes Down the Drain", Grumbles the Gentle Giant reveals that he Hates Baths because he thinks he'll slide down the drain. Abby claims he can't fit down there, and when she fills the tub with water, he's revealed to be extremely lean under his fur (and then he does go down the drain). Later episodes, however, retcon this and say that he is naturally chubby and getting wet causes him to get leaner automatically.
  • Adventure Time: The Ice King looks quite rotund at first glance. However, the moment his robes come off, he's revealed to be skeletally thin.
  • My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic: "Sweet and Elite" reveals that Opal, Rarity's fluffy white Persian cat, is actually pretty thin when she gets wet. Specifically, when Rarity drenches her in water in order to maintain a lie to her friends that Opal has not been feeling well.
  • Quick Draw McGraw: In the short "Lamb Chopped", Snagglepuss (in his first appearance) keeps trying to steal McGraw's sheep for dinner. But when he finally snags one and shears it, he finds that underneath its thick fleece the poor thing is nothing but skin and bones. Snagglepuss loses his appetite and returns it.

    Real Life 
  • When angry, cats will puff out their fur in order to look more intimidating.
  • Wooly livestock like sheep and alpacas often apply, especially if they've gone without shearing for longer than usual. A stocky-looking alpaca might be outright skinny once all that wool's come off. In particular, Shrek was a Merino sheep who escaped into the wild in 1998 and was not caught for six years. When he was finally found, his fleece weighed 60 pounds.
  • Chinchillas look pudgy, but they actually have fur so thick that ticks and other parasites find it difficult to survive in it, dying of overheating or asphyxiation.
  • Some cold weather dogs like Huskies and Samoyed tend to be far thinner than they may initially appear. There are videos out there of Huskies walking through gates which appear far too small for them to fit through like they are a T-1000.
  • Pomeranians, a small breed of Spitz dog, notoriously look like small balls of fluff that can sometimes squeeze between the bars on baby gates.
  • Arctic foxes have very dense winter coats that can double their apparent size. When they shed in the spring they look rather scraggly.
  • As discussed in Jim Wight's The Real James Herriot: A Memoir of My Father, James Alfred Wight (who would one day adopt the pen name "James Herriot") at one point owned a dog named Danny, of uncertain breed but believed to be mainly West Highland White Terrier (in Herriot's books, a Very Loosely Based on a True Story retelling of his real life, Danny would be posthumously combined with his successor — a female beagle named Dinah — into the character of Sam, a male beagle). To quote a paragraph:
    Danny did not look to be a thin dog; in fact he appeared to be rather well-rounded. His dense mass of white hair, however, belied the sinewy body beneath. On the few occasions that he was bathed, we were horrified to observe the skeletal figure that emerged from the tub before he disgustedly disappeared up the garden to dry himself off.

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