

And in Men in Black, there’s a “little red button” in the agents’ car that K tells J to steer clear of, except for emergencies - and when it’s pressed, their ride transforms into a wall-climbing menace powered by space shuttle-like thrusters. In Dexter’s Laboratory, hyperactive big sister Dee Dee’s running gag became pressing a red button against Dexter’s commands, which reliably led to disastrous consequences. files these buttons under such time-tested cliches as “ What Does This Button Do?“, “ Plot-Sensitive Button“, and “ Don’t Touch It, You Idiot!” We saw them in scores of James Bond movies, where they triggered ejector seats or overloaded nuclear reactors. The button is a genre-spanning apparatus that’s tested weak wills and spurred cartoonishly cataclysmic events for decades. Lo and behold, what happens? The disobediently curious character presses the red button. Usually one character instructs another to never, under any circumstances, press this button. The big red button trope is up there with the slapstick banana peel and plummeting anvils.

But by then the conspicuous crimson buttons had already seeped into American pop culture.

The joke was lost in translation and bombed. Credit: APīack in 2009, then-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton jokingly gifted Russia’s then-Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov a bulbous red “Reset Button” to usher in a new era of American-Russo relations. A “reactor trip” button in Florida’s Crystal River Nuclear Plant.
