What's the deal with productions/fiction where somebody tries to keep a secret from someone,and in the end the person they were trying to keep the secret from finds out anyway, either because the secret keeper can't stop them from finding out, or the one keeping the secret decides to confess, or the other character finds out right after it looks like the character keeping the secret will get off scott-free? Though there are some exceptions, like in the Hey Arnold episode where Arnold and Gerald play hooky, and although they do get in a lot of trouble, the authorities never find out they were playing hooky. Or in the Full House episode where DJ and Stephanie accidentally put a hole in the wall of Danny's room, he never finds out what's going on. Though he does suspect they were hiding something from him but he was just going to let it go this time (but the kids comment that they actually got away with something).
And what's the deal with characters in so many productions who want something, only in the end when they get the chance to have what they had wanted they turn it down? Seems to happen in quite a few movies, sometimes it's bothersome and sometimes it's not. The only instance I can think of where it's really bothersome is in Legally Blonde. The main characters boyfriend breaks up with him because he wants to date somebody serious, so she goes to his college to prove herself, and in the end he decides that she's the right woman for him, and yet he turns him down. After all that trouble?
And in the epilogue at the end it says that he didn't get any honors or girlfriends or anything despite graduating.... Did he really deserve not to have a happy ending? I feel sorry for the main character when he dumps her at the beginning, but more sorry for her boyfriend at the end.
Back on the subject of "movies where somebody wants something but turns it down at the end", I must say that I am glad it's not done in Happy Gilmore, though it could have been. Happy Gilmore spends his life wanting to be a professional hockey player but never gets picked for a professional team because he's bad at it, and his girlfriend leaves him at the beginning. He eventually becomes a successful golfer... It would have been interesting if after that success he was chosen for a hockey team and he turned it down, and if his ex came back to him and he chose not to get with her again.
And occasionally I hear a joke that TV clips shows are opportunities for the writers to take a vacation. But they still need somebody to write the linking footage. Also, many TV shows have multiple writers, I assume most narrative shows only have a few regular writers per episode, so many writers could have "vacations" a bit often.