Also played straight (except from the other side) with Vignette herself, who regularly cleans her apartment and is a good person, even though she's a demon. It also reflects on her halo, which is entirely covered in thick, black fog. Gabriel DropOut: One sign that Gabriel is a fallen angel is how her apartment is so dirty that Vignette jokes about sinners from hell turning it into their residence.(Causing Vegeta to tell him to shut up, not for the first - or last - time.) Not getting the point Nappa protested that it wasn't his fault, saying that he had been cooped up in his transport pod for months. In Dragonball Z, when Vegeta and Nappa first arrived on Earth, one of many insults that Krillin slung at Nappa was telling him he stunk.Inverted in Sayonara, Zetsubou-Sensei with Chiri's older sister Tane, who's a slob of epic proportions, but otherwise an alright person, especially when compared to her Super OCD-afflicted, Ax-Crazy sister (in fact, Tane even keeps up the uncleanliness to keep Chiri relatively in check.).
![lex doctor insult festering boil lex doctor insult festering boil](https://img.yumpu.com/49893300/1/184x260/arahantship-buddhist-publication-society.jpg)
Compare that to people using Botox (a byproduct of a deadly bacterium, and one of the most lethal toxins on earth when uncontrolled) without even considering the -tox suffix. People who bathed were quite literally risking their lives to be clean - a sign of wicked vanity at the time. Before safe water was available, taking a bath really was more dangerous than remaining dirty. The trope showed up first (at least in the West) in Regency times, or about the time that the urban middle classes first had access to safe, clean running water.
![lex doctor insult festering boil lex doctor insult festering boil](https://brill.com/cover/covers/9789004368088.jpg)
Usually these are Informed Attributes, but occasionally shown to make the bad guys really seem all the more disgusting (although sometimes they may come off as cool, especially if they're pandering to the preteen boy crowd.) But whenever the habits/daily life of the bad guys (either the Big Bad or his/her mooks) are shown, they tend to be absolutely disgusting, to the point where anyone living like that should contract several diseases, including leprosy and the plague, unless they die from food poisoning first. Appears mostly in works of fiction designed for children (and some for adults).