Creepypasta

Creepypastas are horror-related legends or images that have been copy-and-pasted around the Internet.[1][2][3] These Internet entries are often brief, user-generated ghost or alien stories intended to scare readers. They include gruesome tales of murder, suicide, and otherworldly occurrences.[1] According to Time magazine, the genre had its peak audience in 2010 when it was covered by The New York Times.[1]

In the mainstream media, creepypastas relating to the fictitious Slender Man character came to public attention after the 2014 "Slender Man stabbing", in which a twelve-year-old girl from Waukesha, Wisconsin, was stabbed by two of her friends; the perpetrators claimed they "wanted to prove the [Slender Man] skeptics" wrong.[1][4][5] After the murder attempt, some creepypasta website administrators made statements reminding readers of the "line between fiction and reality".[1]

Other notable creepypasta characters and stories include Jeff the Killer, Ted the Caver, and Psychosis.[1][6][7] In May 2015, Machinima Inc. announced plans for a live action web series curated by Clive Barker, titled Clive Barker's Creepy Pasta.[8]

The term is a portmanteau of the words "creepy" and "copypasta", a word used on 4chan in 2006 to describe viral copy-and-pasted text.[1]

Examples of creepypastas

Slender Man

Main article: Slender Man

Slender Man is a thin, tall man with no distinguishable facial features that wears a black suit, and is said to stalk and traumatise people. The character originated in a 2009 SomethingAwful Photoshop competition, and creepypastas were written shortly afterward.

Jeff the Killer

Jeff the Killer is a story accompanied by an image of the character. The story says that a teenager named Jeff was severely injured in an incident of bullying that caused his face to become bleached. Following the incident and having his bandages removed, Jeff realized he liked to harm people, went insane, and cut a smile into his cheeks and burned off his eyelids after returning home from the hospital. After murdering his parents and brother, he is now a serial killer who sneaks into houses at night and whispers "go to sleep" before murdering his victims.[9] In 2013, posters at the imageboard website 4chan stated that the Jeff the Killer image was an extensively edited picture of a girl who committed suicide in the fall of 2008.[6]

Ted the Caver

Ted the Caver began as an Angelfire website in early 2001 that documented the adventures of a man and his friends as they explored a local cave. The story is in the format of a series of blog posts. As the explorers move further into the cave, strange hieroglyphs and winds are encountered. In a final blog post, Ted writes that he and his companions would be bringing a gun into the cave after experiencing a series of nightmares and hallucinations. The blog has not been updated since the final post.[10] In 2005, the author of Ted the Caver revealed that it was an original work of fiction partially inspired by true events.

In 2013, an independent film adaptation of the story was released, called Living Dark: the Story of Ted the Caver.[11]

Penpal

Main article: Penpal (novel)

Penpal is a six-part creepypasta novel by Dathan Auerbach. The original stories were published on reddit, and were collected as a self-published paperback in 2012.[12] The story's protagonist is targeted by a stalker after releasing a balloon carrying a letter with his address on it, as part of a school penpal project.

_9MOTHER9HORSE9EYES9

Main article: _9MOTHER9HORSE9EYES9

"_9MOTHER9HORSE9EYES9" is the screen name of an anonymous writer of science fiction horror short fiction on the social news website Reddit. The work attracted media attention following its publication beginning in April 2016.[13]

Television and lost episode creepypastas

Candle Cove

Candle Cove is a story by Kris Straub written in the format of an online forum thread where people reminisce about a half-remembered children's television series from the 1970s. After sharing memories of the creepy puppets from the series, and discussing nightmares from watching the show (such as a villain called the Skin-Taker and an episode that had no dialogue other than screaming), one poster asks their mother about the series and is told that they just used to tune the TV to static and "watch dead air for 30 minutes". Syfy announced a television drama based on the story in 2015, adapted by Max Landis.[14] The story will make up the first season of Channel Zero set to air on October 11th 2016.[15]

Squidward's Suicide

Squidward's Suicide is a video posted to YouTube that depicts the SpongeBob Squarepants character Squidward Tentacles shooting himself with a shotgun after being booed mercilessly at a clarinet recital, even by SpongeBob SquarePants and Patrick Star. The episode allegedly depicts scenes of nothing but Squidward sitting on his bed crying, as well as single-frame flashes of dead children and other disturbing imagery. A story that provides background for the video states that the episode was created in 2005 and was viewed by a select test screening at Nickelodeon (including the narrator, an editing intern), intended to be the Season 4 premiere "Fear of the Krabby Patty" but was edited over.[16] Show writer Casey Alexander debunked the legend, saying that it was "100% hoax".[17] It is likely based around the departure of show creator Stephen Hillenburg as the show's executive producer.

Video game creepypastas

Ben Drowned

Created by Internet user Alex Hall, or "Jadusable", the story tells of a college student named Matt who bought a used copy of the video game The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask from an elderly man at a yard sale, only to find out that the cartridge is haunted by the ghost of the game's previous owner, a young boy named Ben, who drowned several years earlier and is proceeding to haunt Matt after he deleted Ben's file (as it would only show Ben's username despite Matt using the name "Link") and attempted the game's "fourth day" glitch. The presence of the ghost is described as causing various creepy glitches in the game, including reversed music, warped animation, the recurring presence of the Happy Mask Salesman character, instant death for mundane tasks, "game over" screens with the messages "You shouldn't have done that" and "You've met with a terrible fate, haven't you?", and a crude, massless statue of Link randomly spawning near the player.[18] The creepypasta is also accompanied by various machinima videos posted on YouTube, detailing the story's events.

Polybius

Main article: Polybius (video game)

This urban legend, often regarded as a creepypasta due to its subsequent popularization online, concerns an alleged 1981 arcade game. The game is said to be similar to Tempest, except that it contains seizure-inducing flashes and subliminal messages that would lead to players' suicide, before men in black collected the data to use it on others. Different versions of the story claim that the game was part of MK Ultra, simply a glitchy early version of Tempest that was later renamed Polybius, or various other theories.

Analysis

Shira Chess, an assistant professor of mass media arts at the University of Georgia, has compared the phenomenon of creepypasta to folklore. However, she notes that instead of being passed down orally over a timespan of generations, creepypasta is created online within hours or days.[19]

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Roy, Jessica (3 June 2014). "Behind Creepypasta, the Internet Community That Allegedly Spread a Killer Meme". Time. Retrieved 17 October 2014.
  2. Considine, Austin (12 November 2010). "Bored at Work? Try Creepypasta, or Web Scares". The New York Times. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
  3. Henriksen, Line (17 Dec 2013). "Here be monsters: a choreomaniac's companion to the danse macabre". Women & Performance: a journal of feminist theory. 23 (3): 414–423. doi:10.1080/0740770X.2013.857082. Retrieved 18 April 2015.
  4. Fernando Alfonso III (August 2, 2013). "4chan hunts down the origins of an Internet horror legend". Daily Dot.
  5. Dewey, Caitlin (6 June 2014). "The complete, terrifying history of 'Slender Man', the Internet meme that compelled two 12-year-olds to stab their friend". The Washington Post. Retrieved 17 October 2014.
  6. 1 2 "Who is "Jeff the Killer"? And is his picture haunted by a real death?". io9. Retrieved 31 December 2013.
  7. "13 Frighteningly Shareable Creepypastas". Mashable. Retrieved 31 December 2013.
  8. "Machinima announces web series from Clive Barker, Bruce Timm, RoboCop, and more". The A.V. Club. 5 May 2015. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
  9. "Creepypasta – Jeff the Killer".
  10. Romano, Aja (31 October 2012). "The definitive guide to creepypasta—the Internet's urban legends". The Daily Dot. Retrieved 1 September 2015.
  11. Bencic, Sandra. "The Living Dark: The Story of Ted the Caver (2013)". AllMovie. Retrieved 1 September 2015.
  12. Matt Barone (22 February 2013). ""Penpal" Author Dathan Auerbach: From Anonymous Reddit Poster to Published Novelist". Complex.
  13. Alexander, Leigh (5 May 2016). "_9MOTHER9HORSE9EYES9: the mysterious tale terrifying Reddit". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 May 2016.
  14. Hughes, William (30 June 2015). "Max Landis to adapt popular creepypasta Candle Cove for Syfy". The A.V. Club. Retrieved 21 July 2015.
  15. https://www.yahoo.com/tv/how-syfy-farmed-creepypasta-for-new-horror-series-channel-zero-203517706.html
  16. "The 4 scariest, most believable stories on the internet - News - Geek.com". @geekdotcom.
  17. Alexander, Casey (March 28, 2014). "Twitter / _dolza_: @Tannerm0rse 100% hoax". Twitter. Archived from the original on April 26, 2014. Retrieved April 26, 2014.
  18. "The lingering appeal of Pokémon's greatest ghost story". Kill Screen.
  19. Manjoo, Farhad (July 10, 2014). "Urban Legends Told Online". Section B; Column 0; Business/Financial Desk; Pg. 1: The New York TImes.

External links

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