Messy bob hairstyle

Girlswithbobcuts

2023.04.05 05:57 ttaywgnik Girlswithbobcuts

A SFW media subreddit of women with Bob Cuts.
[link]


2024.05.13 18:26 Bulletblackwolf Prompt Of The Day For 05-13-2024: Cybernetic Mercenary!

Prompt Of The Day For 05-13-2024: Cybernetic Mercenary!
Today’s prompt is “Cybernetic Mercenary.” Our Kins have been transported into the world of a futuristic cityscape. They navigate the bustling streets with confidence as badass mercenaries ready to take on the pulse of the city. With a hacker's cunning, a warrior's strength, and an engineer's ingenuity, they can conquer even the most daunting of obstacles, emerging victorious against all odds.
✨ PROMPT ✨
(Dynamic dystopian Dark Cyberpunk 2077 Illustration by Raymond Swanland:1.4), (beeple), (Don Bluth, Guweiz:1.2). A MAN/WOMAN with an undercut hairstyle, is a badass mercenary, walking down a busy, messy, wet futuristic city street during a ((rainy thunderstorm)), ((HIS/HER combat boots clicking on the wet ground)). HE/SHE is wearing a detailed, intricate, futuristic armor with multiple cybernetic implants and ((arms, legs are adorned with cable neon LEDs)). The street is lit by colorful neon lights. 8k, reflective lighting, Hyperrealistic. (Full body image)///((skin, bikini))
submitted by Bulletblackwolf to KindroidAI [link] [comments]


2024.05.13 13:08 paranoidgummer 31 [M4R] California/Anywhere - Platonic Chats

Hello there!
Looking for platonic chats, as I am in a long term monogamous relationship.
I am a stay at home boyfriend to a loving family of a girl and a three year-old cat. I spend my days cleaning a perpetually messy apartment, reading old video game magazines, watching TV shows, playing old video games, hanging with good friends, swimming, urban exploration, thrifting, biking, or sleeping.
I read the occasionally book too, but I mostly stick with autobiographies. Some notable reads for me personally are:
Ghost Rider by Neil Peart
It's Always Something by Gilda Radner
Kiss Me Like a Stranger by Gene Wilder
Comedy, Comedy, Comedy, Drama by Bob Odenkirk.
I really love pop culture history.
I'm really easy to talk to, and like to think of myself as an open book. I think any topic can be discussed, as long as things remain platonic. I'm just here to meet some new people to chat with, learn some things, and gain new perspectives. It's always nice when you find people you click with, but it's also fine to just have a quick chat and move on.
I am very introverted and need a lot of personal time to relax and destress, so if you are someone who needs constant attention, this isn't the place for it. I think it's fair that people have lives to live and they need their space and I will give it. I expect the same courtesy. I don't need to you to respond right away, or even the same day if that's just what your schedule permits.
I'm a big video game lover and collector, and right now my passion is collecting and playing PS3 games. Tell me about all the video games that are important to you, or just what you are currently playing.
What's your favorite song or album?
Every little detail makes people unique, which makes every possible new interaction exciting.
Looking forward to hearing from you!
Cheers x
submitted by paranoidgummer to R4R30Plus [link] [comments]


2024.05.13 13:05 paranoidgummer [31/M] California/Anywhere - Platonic Chats

Hello there!
Looking for platonic chats, as I am in a long term monogamous relationship.
I am a stay at home boyfriend to a loving family of a girl and a three year-old cat. I spend my days cleaning a perpetually messy apartment, reading old video game magazines, watching TV shows, playing old video games, hanging with good friends, swimming, urban exploration, thrifting, biking, or sleeping.
I read the occasionally book too, but I mostly stick with autobiographies. Some notable reads for me personally are:
Ghost Rider by Neil Peart
It's Always Something by Gilda Radner
Kiss Me Like a Stranger by Gene Wilder
Comedy, Comedy, Comedy, Drama by Bob Odenkirk.
I really love pop culture history.
I'm really easy to talk to, and like to think of myself as an open book. I think any topic can be discussed, as long as things remain platonic. I'm just here to meet some new people to chat with, learn some things, and gain new perspectives. It's always nice when you find people you click with, but it's also fine to just have a quick chat and move on.
I am very introverted and need a lot of personal time to relax and destress, so if you are someone who needs constant attention, this isn't the place for it. I think it's fair that people have lives to live and they need their space and I will give it. I expect the same courtesy. I don't need to you to respond right away, or even the same day if that's just what your schedule permits.
I'm a big video game lover and collector, and right now my passion is collecting and playing PS3 games. Tell me about all the video games that are important to you, or just what you are currently playing.
What's your favorite song or album?
Every little detail makes people unique, which makes every possible new interaction exciting.
Looking forward to hearing from you!
Cheers x
submitted by paranoidgummer to MeetNewPeopleHere [link] [comments]


2024.05.13 13:04 paranoidgummer 31M California/Anywhere - Platonic Chats

Hello there!
Looking for platonic chats, as I am in a long term monogamous relationship.
I am a stay at home boyfriend to a loving family of a girl and a three year-old cat. I spend my days cleaning a perpetually messy apartment, reading old video game magazines, watching TV shows, playing old video games, hanging with good friends, swimming, urban exploration, thrifting, biking, or sleeping.
I read the occasionally book too, but I mostly stick with autobiographies. Some notable reads for me personally are:
Ghost Rider by Neil Peart
It's Always Something by Gilda Radner
Kiss Me Like a Stranger by Gene Wilder
Comedy, Comedy, Comedy, Drama by Bob Odenkirk.
I really love pop culture history.
I'm really easy to talk to, and like to think of myself as an open book. I think any topic can be discussed, as long as things remain platonic. I'm just here to meet some new people to chat with, learn some things, and gain new perspectives. It's always nice when you find people you click with, but it's also fine to just have a quick chat and move on.
I am very introverted and need a lot of personal time to relax and destress, so if you are someone who needs constant attention, this isn't the place for it. I think it's fair that people have lives to live and they need their space and I will give it. I expect the same courtesy. I don't need to you to respond right away, or even the same day if that's just what your schedule permits.
I'm a big video game lover and collector, and right now my passion is collecting and playing PS3 games. Tell me about all the video games that are important to you, or just what you are currently playing.
What's your favorite song or album?
Every little detail makes people unique, which makes every possible new interaction exciting.
Looking forward to hearing from you!
Cheers x
submitted by paranoidgummer to MakeNewFriendsHere [link] [comments]


2024.05.13 13:03 paranoidgummer 31 [M4A] #California #Online Platonic Chats

Hello there!
Looking for platonic chats, as I am in a long term monogamous relationship.
I am a stay at home boyfriend to a loving family of a girl and a three year-old cat. I spend my days cleaning a perpetually messy apartment, reading old video game magazines, watching TV shows, playing old video games, hanging with good friends, swimming, urban exploration, thrifting, biking, or sleeping.
I read the occasionally book too, but I mostly stick with autobiographies. Some notable reads for me personally are:
Ghost Rider by Neil Peart
It's Always Something by Gilda Radner
Kiss Me Like a Stranger by Gene Wilder
Comedy, Comedy, Comedy, Drama by Bob Odenkirk.
I really love pop culture history.
I'm really easy to talk to, and like to think of myself as an open book. I think any topic can be discussed, as long as things remain platonic. I'm just here to meet some new people to chat with, learn some things, and gain new perspectives. It's always nice when you find people you click with, but it's also fine to just have a quick chat and move on.
I am very introverted and need a lot of personal time to relax and destress, so if you are someone who needs constant attention, this isn't the place for it. I think it's fair that people have lives to live and they need their space and I will give it. I expect the same courtesy. I don't need to you to respond right away, or even the same day if that's just what your schedule permits.
I'm a big video game lover and collector, and right now my passion is collecting and playing PS3 games. Tell me about all the video games that are important to you, or just what you are currently playing.
What's your favorite song or album?
Every little detail makes people unique, which makes every possible new interaction exciting.
Looking forward to hearing from you!
Cheers x
submitted by paranoidgummer to r4r [link] [comments]


2024.05.13 12:38 Intrepid-Shine-8561 How do I ask my barber for this? (Don't really have wavy hair)

How do I ask my barber for this? (Don't really have wavy hair) submitted by Intrepid-Shine-8561 to malehairadvice [link] [comments]


2024.05.13 10:22 mmmano4ka Haircut

Haircut
I AM SURE i saw some people discussing her hairstyle couple of days ago, saying, that they hope she won't get a fringe and won't do a short bob haircut, because this length and style now are so good and fit her being mum perfectly.
submitted by mmmano4ka to julieeandcamilla [link] [comments]


2024.05.13 03:49 No_Recognition7135 Help - new blonde

TLDR: I have no idea how to make my hair feel like my hair again now that I've gone blonde. It feels almost sticky on non wash days. Any ideas?

I have enjoyed coloring my hair for many years, but I've always been really lazy about it. I always go darker so when my hair starts to grow, it looks more natural and I don't have to worry so much about upkeep. I've changed my hairstyle a lot over the years, too, but usually end up with the same, chin to shoulder length bob with bangs of some kind.
I never really had any hair care education. I have very straight, fine, medium thickness, medium brown hair. For a long time, my routine was wash, brush, go. I am a single parent of a special needs child with a full time job. I wake up early, shower, make sure my kid is on the bus, go to work, come home, and spend time with my kid until bedtime when I crash. I have no time alone. It also didn't help that I was struggling with mental illness (still am but it's much more controlled) so I really didn't care.
A few years ago, I shaved my head. All the hair on my head now has never been touched by anything stronger than my shampoo. I never blow dried and I never used hairspray. I've also never had any body to my hair.
Fast forward to a couple months ago. I decided I wanted to color my hair again. I looked over pictures, spent time trying to decide what I want. I finally landed on going lighter since I've never done it before, and it would give me a good base to add more "fun" colors (pink tint, orange, something like that). I was fully aware going into it that my routine was going to change. I made the appointment, though I made the wrong kind of appointment, so there wasn't enough time to do the whole thing. She essentially did a partial highlight all over the top layers of my hair. I absolutely love it. I spent most of the appointment asking for some basic tips to help keep my hair as long as possible until my next appointment.
What I was not prepared for was how different my hair was going to feel. I figured it would be drier, but I wasn't entirely sure what that actually meant.
My hair care routine is different. I don't wash as often. I use purple shampoo once a week. I use a hair mask once a week. I wash twice a week. I blow dry most of the way, brush, then finish. In the morning, I brush and use a little texture spray. On non wash days, I use dry shampoo at night. I haven't really gotten much into styling yet, I'm just trying to learn how to keep it looking healthy and keep the color.
The major problem I'm running into is that my hair feels... sticky, I guess, for lack of a better word. On non wash days, it doesn't brush out very well, I try to be gentle and patient about it. I can't run my fingers through my hair like I always used to do, it's a stress tick and it's weird not being able to do it. It's got a lot more body now, which I love, and I love the color. I just wish it FELT better.
Long story long, I am looking for tips to get my hair to feel better on non wash days. Or at least knowing if this is just my life now haha. I have zero frame of reference for even where to begin.
Attached are some photos. The orange blazer is right before I got it colored. The black and white striped shirt is right after washing. The white and pink shirt is day two hair. The black and gray is day four hair. I rarely go out on day four so I don't usually do anything to it, today was my first time actually doing "day four hair."
I'm sorry for the super long post. One of my major flaws is being long winded haha!
submitted by No_Recognition7135 to Haircare [link] [comments]


2024.05.12 16:05 NoahRosado77 I'm so inept when it comes to making believable horn hair. I wish they'd have a huge hair update with like a dozen or so new hairstyles or even more in-depth hair adjustment options, like length or messiness sliders.

submitted by NoahRosado77 to HeroForgeMinis [link] [comments]


2024.05.12 15:10 Lizzie3212 Need advice for a new haircut

Need advice for a new haircut
I pretty much had more or less the same haircut my whole life. Since my hair is really fine and straight, they look bad very easily at my current length. In these pictures they look alright but usually they look kind of messy and lifeless (more like in the last picture) and I have been thinking about cutting them shorter, but I am not sure what length would suit me. What do you guys think? Could a long bob work? I have also thought about getting bangs because of my big forehead but I am afraid it would draw too much attention towards my nose. Does anyone have any advice and opinions?
submitted by Lizzie3212 to femalehairadvice [link] [comments]


2024.05.12 15:01 749201748291 updo ideas for a sweaty fat woman with thinning on top?

i don't cope well in the warm weather so i need my hair tied up at all times
my hair is gradually thinning on top from PCOS so i can't do high or even mid ponytails or anything that pulls my hair taut because it tugs the sparse patch and hurts, and makes it more visible, and will probably pull out more hair because it can't hold the weight
my side bangs don't stay heat styled for long because as soon as i sweat they just curl back up and stick out weirdly, they look ridiculous. they dont even look like a bad hairstyle, they look like they couldn't be classed as a hairstyle because what they're doing is just not a thing
i mostly end up twisting my bangs loosely and pinning them to the side of my head and tying the rest in a low bun or claw clip
it makes me look like an egg
any suggestions for styles that'd be a bit more flattering? make me look a bit less old and frumpy? less of a pinhead
please don't suggest cutting it; cutting it short would make me more of an egg and cutting it into a bob would make me just as sweaty but it'd be harder to tie up
i'm 30 and have mid length mid brown hair
thanks!
submitted by 749201748291 to Hair [link] [comments]


2024.05.12 04:48 Stillstuckin2022 Hair style meme

Hair style meme
:3
submitted by Stillstuckin2022 to slaytheprincess [link] [comments]


2024.05.12 01:56 curlywhiskerowl Help me choose, + jewelry?

Help me choose, + jewelry?
Hi! My brother is getting married in Iowa in late July, and the dress code is black tie. I've never been to any black tie event before!
I'm a petite, 35 year old woman and my style is classic and feminine (and a bit quirky day to day, but I don't want to be quirky at a black tie wedding). My hair is a curly bob so a fancy hairstyle would end at "pinned up nicely on one side." My shoes are basic closed toed Clark's heels with an ankle strap and are non negotiable due to foot issues.
My options are:

1: One shouldered gown, jewelry TBD (my husband's fave)—just above floor length

2: V neck gown with the red topaz jewelry set pictured (my fave, and that of the ladies at the dress shop)—a bit longer than floor length

Both fit well with my chosen heels. ☺️ Sorry I don't have pics of them on.
Questions: 1. Which dress do you prefer? 2. What jewelry would you wear with the one shouldered gown? I'm thinking just a bracelet and earrings... Specific search terms would be really helpful.
Thank you so much for any help!
submitted by curlywhiskerowl to Weddingattireapproval [link] [comments]


2024.05.11 21:13 SanderSo47 Directors at the Box Office: Wes Craven

Directors at the Box Office: Wes Craven
https://preview.redd.it/5jhcjegtjuzc1.png?width=1920&format=png&auto=webp&s=71a26f361e87730152e07e12f1bc76322db0b023
Here's a new edition of "Directors at the Box Office", which seeks to explore the directors' trajectory at the box office and analyze their hits and bombs. I already talked about a few, and as I promised, it's Wes Craven's turn.
Craven earned a master's degree in philosophy and writing from Johns Hopkins University. He subsequently bought a 16mm film camera and began making short movies. His friend Steve Chapin informed him of a messenger position at a New York City film production co, where his brother, future folk-rock star Harry Chapin worked. He started in the industry as a sound editor, before transitioning as a porn director. He said he made "many hardcore X-rated films" under pseudonyms. And then he transitioned into directing for the big screen.
From a box office perspective, how reliable was he to deliver a box office hit?
That's the point of this post. To analyze his career.

It should be noted that as he started his career in the 1970s, some of the domestic grosses here will be adjusted by inflation. The table with his highest grossing films, however, will be left in its unadjusted form, as the worldwide grosses are more difficult to adjust.

The Last House on the Left (1972)

"Mari, seventeen, is dying. Even for her, the worst is yet to come."
His directorial debut. The film stars Sandra Peabody, Lucy Grantham, David Hess, Fred J. Lincoln, Jeramie Rain, and Marc Sheffler. The plot follows Mari Collingwood, a teenager who is abducted, raped, and tortured by a family of violent fugitives led by Krug Stillo on her seventeenth birthday. When her parents discover what happened to her, they seek vengeance against the family, who have taken shelter at their home.
Craven, who had no money at the time, was put on the job of synchronizing dailies for Sean S. Cunningham's Together. They became friends, and Hallmark Releasing gave them $90,000 to make another film. Craven considered a hardcore film, but decided to tone it down a bit. The idea for this film came from Ingmar Bergman's The Virgin Spring, and Craven wanted to make a film in which the violence would be shown in detail onscreen, as he felt that many popular films of the era, such as Westerns, glamorized violence and the "vigilante hero", and gave the public a misleading representation of death in the wake of the Vietnam War.
The film attracted negative media attention for its heavy graphic content, and there were calls for some theaters to drop the film. But you know, bad buzz is still buzz and that translated to a pretty good run in theaters, earning up to $3 million in its initial run. Even to this day, the film is polarizing due to its violence and themes. But Craven just made his name well known.
  • Budget: $90,000.
  • Domestic gross: $3,100,000. ($23.1 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $3,100,000.

The Hills Have Eyes (1977)

"A nice American family. They didn't want to kill. But they didn't want to die."
His second film. The film stars Susan Lanier, Michael Berryman and Dee Wallace. The film follows the Carters, a suburban family targeted by a family of cannibal savages after becoming stranded in the Nevada desert.
Craven wanted to make a non-horror, but he found that his investors only wanted films with graphic content. At the New York Public Library, Craven checked the library's forensics department, and learned of the legend of Sawney Bean - the alleged head of a 48-person Scottish clan responsible for the murder and cannibalization of more than one thousand people. He drew influences from this, The Texas Chain Saw Massacre and The Grapes of Wrath. Craven also had to cut a lot of scenes to avoid getting an X rating.
The film once again drew negative attention for its violence. But it made over $25 million at the box office, which was an even bigger success than House. It subsequently earned a cult following.
  • Budget: $700,000.
  • Domestic gross: $25,000,000. ($128.8 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $25,000,000.

Deadly Blessing (1981)

"Pray you're not blessed."
His third film. It stars Ernest Borgnine, Maren Jensen, Susan Buckner, and Sharon Stone, and tells the story of a strange figure committing murder in a contemporary community that is not far from another community that believes in ancient evil and curses.
It received negative reviews, but it was another box office success for Craven.
  • Budget: $3,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $8,279,042. ($28.4 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $8,279,042.

Swamp Thing (1982)

"Science transformed him into a monster. Love changed him even more!"
His fourth film. Based on the DC Comics character created by Len Wein and Bernie Wrightson, it stars Louis Jourdan and Adrienne Barbeau. It tells the story of scientist Alec Holland who is transformed into the monster known as Swamp Thing through laboratory sabotage orchestrated by the evil Anton Arcane. Later, he helps a woman named Alice Cable and battles the man responsible for it all, the ruthless Arcane.
The film made $2.5 million domestically, despite mixed reviews.
  • Budget: N/A.
  • Domestic gross: $2,500,000. ($8 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $2,500,000.

A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984)

"If Nancy doesn't wake up screaming, she won't wake up at all."
His fifth film. It stars Heather Langenkamp, John Saxon, Ronee Blakley, Johnny Depp, and Robert Englund. The film's plot concerns a group of teenagers who are targeted by Freddy Krueger, an undead child killer who can murder people through their dreams, as retribution against their parents who burned him alive.
The film was inspired by several newspaper articles printed in the Los Angeles Times in the 1970s about Hmong refugees, who, after fleeing to the United States because of war and genocide in Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnam, suffered disturbing nightmares and refused to sleep. Some of the men died in their sleep soon after. This, along with the song "Dream Weaver" by Gary Wright, motivated Craven to craft a horror film focused on people dying through their sleep.
The film's villain, Freddy Krueger, is drawn from Craven's early life. One night, a young Craven saw an elderly man walking on the sidepath outside the window of his home. The man stopped to glance at a startled Craven and walked off. This served as the inspiration for Krueger. Initially, Fred Krueger was intended to be a child molester, but Craven eventually characterized him as a child murderer to avoid being accused of exploiting a spate of highly publicized child molestation cases that occurred in California around the time of the film's production. He settled on the name Freddy Krueger, which was based on a childhood bully of his.
The process of writing the film went smoothly, the real problem was finding a studio. Craven sent it to most studios, and all rejected it. The first studio to show interest was Disney, but Craven declined their offer as they wanted a more toned-down kid-friendly PG-13 flick. When Paramount and Universal also turned it down, Craven decided to go to the independent studio New Line Cinema. The studio only distributed films, but they agreed in financing the film. As they lacked the financial resources for the production, New Line had to turn to external financiers.
Despite opening in just 165 theaters, the film earned $1.2 million in its opening weekend, making it clear that it would be an immediate box office success. It eventually closed with $25 million domestically, and $57 million worldwide. It received critical acclaim, and has been referred as one of the best and most influential slashers ever made. Freddy Krueger would soon be hailed as one of the most emblematic figures of horror, and Craven quickly earned a reputation as a horror legend. But most importantly, it was the beginning of New Line Cinema as a studio, which is why it's referred as "the house that Freddy built."
The film would later spawn a franchise, although Craven wouldn't direct any of the "sequels." Why the quotation marks? We'll get to that later on.
  • Budget: $1,100,000.
  • Domestic gross: $25,624,448. ($77 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $57,185,134.

The Hills Have Eyes Part II (1985)

"So you think you're lucky to be alive."
His sixth film. The sequel to The Hills Have Eyes, it stars Tamara Stafford, Kevin Spirtas, John Bloom, Michael Berryman, Penny Johnson, Janus Blythe, John Laughlin, Willard E. Pugh, Peter Frechette and Robert Houston. It follows a group of bikers who become stranded in the desert and find themselves fighting off a family of inbred cannibals who live off the land.
The film was shot on a very low budget, and it simply ended prematurely because they ran out of funds. There are no box office numbers available, but it received awful reviews.

Deadly Friend (1986)

"There's no one alive who'll play with the girl next door."
His seventh film. Based on the novel Friend by Diana Henstell, it stars Matthew Laborteaux, Kristy Swanson, Michael Sharrett, Anne Twomey, Richard Marcus, and Anne Ramsey. Its plot follows a teenage computer prodigy who implants a robot's processor into the brain of his teenage neighbor after she is pronounced brain dead; the experiment proves successful, but she swiftly begins a killing spree in their neighborhood.
Craven wanted to make a PG-rated science fiction film, with a similar tone to Starman, hoping to prove that he could make something that wasn't horror-themed. An unfinished version of the film was screened to a test audience of Craven's fanbase, and it was poorly received for its lack of violence and gore like his previous films. So WB decided to rewrite the film, adding more scenes with tons of gore. This made the final film appear tonally jumbled, and it went from easy PG to struggling to not get an X rating.
The film was poorly received for its story and inconsistent tone. It also marked a huge flop at the box office, not even hitting $10 million. Craven lost interest in the film after WB inserted their own version, and he has since disowned the film.
  • Budget: $11,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $8,988,731. ($25.6 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $8,988,731.

The Serpent and the Rainbow (1988)

"Don't bury me, I'm not dead!"
His eighth film. It stars Bill Pullman, and is loosely based on the life of ethnobotanist Wade Davis, recounting his experiences in Haiti investigating the story of Clairvius Narcisse, who was allegedly poisoned, buried alive, and revived with a herbal brew which produced what was called a zombie.
The film received mixed reactions, but it was a much needed box office success for Craven.
  • Budget: $7,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $19,595,031. ($51.7 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $19,595,031.

Shocker (1989)

"No more Mr. Nice Guy."
His ninth film. It stars Michael Murphy, Peter Berg, Cami Cooper, and Mitch Pileggi, and follows a serial killer who uses electricity to come back from the dead and carry out his vengeance on the football player who turned him in to the police.
Another mixed bag for Craven, but it was still profitable.
  • Budget: N/A.
  • Domestic gross: $16,554,699. ($41.6 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $16,554,699.

The People Under the Stairs (1991)

"In every neighborhood, there's one house that adults whisper about and children cross the street to avoid."
His tenth film. It stars Brandon Adams, Everett McGill, Wendy Robie, and A. J. Langer. The plot follows a young boy and two adult robbers who become trapped in a house belonging to a neighborhood's crooked landlords after breaking in to steal their collection of gold coins as the boy learns a dark secret about them and what also lurks in their house.
After a slate of mixed performers, the film received Craven's best reviews since Elm Street. To the surprise of Universal, it was also a box office success.
  • Budget: $6,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $24,204,154. ($55.5 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $31,347,154.

Wes Craven's New Nightmare (1994)

"This time, the terror doesn't stop at the screen."
His 11th film. The installment in the A Nightmare on Elm Street franchise, it stars Robert Englund, Heather Langenkamp, Miko Hughes and John Saxon. The film is not part of the same continuity as previous films, and it portrays Freddy Krueger as a fictional movie villain who invades the real world and haunts the cast and crew involved in the making of the films about him.
While Craven co-wrote the franchise's third installment, Dream Warriors, he wasn't that involved with the rest of the franchise. He wanted to make a deliberately more cerebral film than recent entries to the franchise, as he considered them as being cartoonish, and not faithful to his original themes. Specifically, he wanted Freddy to resemble his original vision: far darker and less comical. To reinforce this, the character's make-up and outfit were enhanced, with one of the most prominent differences being that he now wears a long blue/black trenchcoat. In addition, the signature glove was redesigned for a more organic look, with the fingers resembling bones and having muscle textures in between.
The film received high praise, and was considered as the best film in the franchise since the original (it was Englund's favorite). But the franchise has been bleeding interest at the box office, and New Nightmare unfortunately had to suffer. It was profitable, but it became the lowest grossing film in the franchise.
  • Budget: $8,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $18,090,181. ($38.1 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $19,721,741.

Vampire in Brooklyn (1995)

"A comic tale of horror and seduction."
His 12th film. It stars Eddie Murphy, Angela Bassett, Allen Payne, Kadeem Hardison, John Witherspoon, Zakes Mokae, and Joanna Cassidy. It follows a Caribbean vampire who seduces a Brooklyn police officer who has no idea that she is half-vampire.
The film had awful reviews, and despite the presence of a huge star like Eddie Murphy, it disappointed at the box office. Craven really needed a hit.
  • Budget: $8,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $19,751,736. ($40.4 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $34,951,736.

Scream (1996)

"Someone has taken their love of scary movies one step too far."
His 13th film. It stars David Arquette, Neve Campbell, Courteney Cox, Matthew Lillard, Rose McGowan, Skeet Ulrich and Drew Barrymore. Set in the fictional town of Woodsboro, California, Scream's plot follows high school student Sidney Prescott and her friends, who, on the anniversary of her mother's murder, become the targets of a costumed serial killer known as Ghostface.
As he was trying to make it in the industry, Kevin Williamson watched a Turning Point documentary about serial killer Danny Rolling which he said left him unsettled. Williamson later noticed an open window, armed himself with a knife, and called his friend for support. The pair began discussing horror characters that had resonated with them such as Freddy Krueger and Jason Voorhees. This experience prompted Williamson to start developing a concept wherein a girl is haunted by a caller.
He started writing a film titled Scary Movie, and even left an outline for possible sequels. The concept was part of an era where there was debate over the influence of cinematic violence on audience, with Williamson coming up with a brilliant line "movies don't create psychos, movies make psychos more creative." It was inspired by many 1980s slashers, even though the genre was on decline by that point. His characters were intentionally designed to be knowledgeable about these horror films and their typical elements, with the intention of creating a unique killer who was not only aware of horror film clichés but also exploited them for his own advantage.
While Williamson struggled with his previous films, this script was part of a bidding war with the studios, to the point that Oliver Stone himself wanted to direct it. Miramax (through Dimension Films) bought the script, and Williamson made some rewrites to scale back the violence. Bob Weinstein also wanted to change the name, as he believed the audiences would think the film is a comedy.
The studio considered Danny Boyle, Tom McLoughlin, Sam Raimi, Robert Rodriguez, George A. Romero, Quentin Tarantino, and Anthony Waller as prime candidates to direct the film, but they all preferred to view the film as a comedy. Wes Craven was considered, but the studio believed he couldn't direct a satire. Craven also wasn't planning on directing it, as he wanted to focus on more mainstream films to salvage his career. Craven's assistant Julie Plec (who would collaborate with Williamson on The Vampire Diaries) convinced him in helming the project. By signing, Craven decided to get back some of the gore that was missing in the previous drafts.
A huge contrast to the horror films of the era was that the film had established actors as the leads, as Craven and Williamson wanted to prove that no character was safe. Drew Barrymore had already starred in a few recognizable names, Neve Campbell was on the hit show Party of Five, Rose McGowan was known for Encino Man and The Doom Generation, David Arquette, Matthew Lillard and Skeet Ulrich were recognizable supporting characters, and Courteney Cox obviously was known for Friends. Vince Vaughn and Natasha Lyonne were the preferred choices for Billy and Tatum, but external problems caused them to drop out.
After viewing the dailies raw footage, the Weinsteins criticized the quality of Craven's work as "workmanlike at best", believing it lacked tension and had an inconsistent tone. The Weinsteins also disliked the mask design, and said Barrymore lacked sex appeal because of the pageboy hairstyle she had chosen. While filming the final fight, Campbell's stuntwoman accidentally stabbed Ulrich with an umbrella tip, missing the protective vest he was wearing and hitting the site of an open heart surgery Ulrich had as a child. During post-production, Harvey Weinstein decided to name the film as Scream based on the Michael and Janet Jackson song.
In a surprising move, the Weinsteins decided to release the film during the holiday season as counter-programming, offering teenagers an alternative to more traditional holiday fare. The decision was unpopular with the cast and crew, with Williamson expecting the film to fail. The film opened with $6.4 million and finishing in fourth place, leading analysts to consider the film as a bomb.
But the film just kept growing.
Buoyed by positive word of mouth, the Weinsteins increased marketing and the film managed to increase in its second and third weekends. It closed with $103 million domestically and $173 million worldwide, becoming the highest grossing slasher film ever and Craven's highest grossing film ever. The film received critical acclaim for its characters and writing, and has since been deemed as one of the most influential horror films of all time. It rekindled interest in horror, resurrected Craven's career and launched the careers of Williamson and the cast.
  • Budget: $15,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $103,046,663. ($245.4 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $173,046,663.

Scream 2 (1997)

"Someone has taken their love of sequels one step too far."
His 14th film. The sequel to Scream, it stars David Arquette, Neve Campbell, Courteney Cox, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Jamie Kennedy, Laurie Metcalf, Jerry O'Connell, Elise Neal, Timothy Olyphant, Jada Pinkett, and Liev Schreiber. The film takes place two years after the first film and again follows the character of Sidney Prescott, along with other survivors of the Woodsboro massacre, at the fictional Windsor College in Ohio where they are targeted by a copycat killer using the guise of Ghostface.
As Williamson already had plans for sequels, the idea was for Sidney to attend college while being stalked by a copycat Ghostface killer. As filming began, Williamson's script had four killers: Derek, Hallie, Cotton Weary, and Nancy Loomis. But after Williamson transferred his script to the production, it was leaked onto the Internet in full, revealing the identity of the killers and a large amount of the involved plot. This resulted in the production continuing to film with only a partial script while Williamson conducted extensive rewrites, changing much of the film's finale, the identities of the film's killers and drastically altering the roles of other characters such as Randy Meeks and Joel. With a short deadline, Williamson couldn't fully compromise on the final script, forcing Craven to fill in the gaps himself. So the film was one of the very first cases where the Internet leaked major aspects of a film.
As the Weinsteins wanted the film ready for December, it was able to capitalize on the audience's word of mouth to the original. It opened with $32 million in its first weekend, almost five times as big as the original, and the biggest December debut. It didn't hold as great as the original due to the competition, such as Titanic, but it still made $172.3 million worldwide, almost matching the original's gross. It also received very positive reviews, and so a profitable franchise was already underway.
  • Budget: $24,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $101,363,301. ($237.2 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $172,363,301.

Music of the Heart (1999)

"She gave them a gift they could never imagine. They gave the system a fight it would never forget."
His 15th film. The film stars Meryl Streep, Aidan Quinn, Angela Bassett, Gloria Estefan, Jane Leeves, Kieran Culkin and Jay O. Sanders. The film is a dramatization of the true story of Roberta Guaspari, who co-founded the Opus 118 Harlem School of Music and fought for music education funding in New York City public schools.
After seeing the documentary Small Wonders, Craven was inspired to make a full-length film about Guaspari. Madonna was originally signed to play the role of Guaspari, but left the project before filming began, citing "creative differences" with Craven. When she left, Madonna had already studied for many months to play the violin. Streep learned to play Bach's Concerto for 2 Violins for the film. The project marked a huge departure for Craven; it was his first and only film to be rated PG, and his only one to not be horror or thriller.
It received generally positive reviews, but it bombed at the box office. It received 2 Oscar nominations for Best Actress and Best Original Song, the only Craven film to get any noms.
  • Budget: $27,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $14,859,394. ($27.8 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $14,936,407.

Scream 3 (2000)

"The most terrifying scream is always the last."
His 16th film. The third installment in the Scream franchise, it stars David Arquette, Neve Campbell, Courteney Cox Arquette, Parker Posey, Patrick Dempsey, Scott Foley, Lance Henriksen, Matt Keeslar, Jenny McCarthy, Emily Mortimer, Deon Richmond, and Patrick Warburton. The film's story takes place one year after the previous film's events and follows Sidney Prescott, who has gone into self-imposed isolation following the events of the previous two films but is drawn to Hollywood after a new Ghostface begins killing the cast of the film within a film Stab 3.
The plans for a sequel were already underway since Williamson sold the script, although Williamson still didn't write a script yet. When the Weinsteins approached him to write the film, Williamson was already busy with many projects (including his directorial debut), and was unavailable to perform his duties. He only made a 20-page outline wherein Ghostface would return just as production on a fictional film Stab 3 would be filmed. His plan was to show the killers were part of a Stab fan club (this idea would later be adapted into his show, The Following). With Williamson not available, Ehren Kruger was tasked in writing.
Shortly before production began on the film, the Columbine High School massacre took place, and many parties began looking for reasoning behind the shooters' actions and there came an increased scrutiny on the role of the media in society, including video games and film, and the influence it could have on an audience. With production of Scream 3 not yet underway, there were considerations about whether the film should be made at that time, aware of the potential for negative attention but the studio decided to press forward, albeit with changes.
The Weinsteins demanded to scale back on the gore and emphasize its satiric humor, as well as moving the setting to Hollywood. At one point in the production, the studio went as far as demanding that the film feature no blood or on-screen violence at all, a drastic departure for the series, but Craven directly intervened. One of the aspects changed was that the killer would be revealed to be Stu Macher, having survived the original film. The Weinsteins changed it after Columbine, as they didn't want to associate violence and murder with a high school setting.
The film opened with $34.7 million, a franchise record and the biggest February debut ever. But it had weak legs, although it still made a very profitable $161.8 million worldwide. While the previous films were well-received, this film received negative reviews, who lambasted the film for becoming the very own thing it satirizes.
  • Budget: $40,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $89,143,175. ($178.2 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $161,834,276.

Cursed (2005)

"What doesn't kill you makes you stronger."
His 17th film. It stars Christina Ricci, Joshua Jackson, Jesse Eisenberg, Judy Greer, Scott Baio, Milo Ventimiglia, Shannon Elizabeth and Mýa, and follows two orphaned siblings attacked by a werewolf loose in Los Angeles.
Kevin Williamson started working on a script that followed the exploits of a New York City serial killer who discovers that his lethal tendencies are due to his lycanthrope nature. When one of his projects was scrapped, Craven decided to direct, teaming them up again for another Scream reunion. But it wasn't planned like that. Craven was making a film, Pulse, when Bob Weinstein abruptly pulled the movie from the schedule ten days before shooting and cut through all the slow lanes, wanting Craven to get to Cursed as soon as possible. Craven was reportedly not pleased so Weinstein doubled his pay in order for him to direct the film. The director deemed the script too tonally similar to his film Vampire in Brooklyn, but felt pressured by the studio, leading him to ultimately sign on.
The film started filming in January 2003, hoping to get the film released in August. In June, they only had six days left for filming. Suddenly, Dimension Films decided to put the movie on hold because top executives at the company weren't happy with the film's ending or how the special effects were progressing, specifically the look of the film's lead lupine. Rick Baker was preparing the final transformation effects when production stopped and asked Weinstein to let his team finish the work in order for it to be ready for the reshoot, but he refused. Patrick Lussier was brought in for massive rewrites, and the film didn't return to production until November. Baker was fired, and the prosthetic make-up was replaced with CGI. Skeet Ulrich filmed his scene as one of the leads, but chose to drop out following the reshoots as he disliked the new direction. It was also heavily edited to get the R rating down to PG-13. The budget was originally $35 million, yet some reports suggest it ballooned all the way to $100 million, making it one of the most expensive horror films ever.
With that budget, it was clear it was not going to be a box office success. It flopped with just $29 million worldwide, and was panned by critics. Craven himself dislikes the final product, and a director's cut was never an option because his original ending was never filmed.
  • Budget: $100,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $19,297,522. ($30.8 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $29,621,722.

Red Eye (2005)

"Fear takes flight."
His 18th film. It stars Rachel McAdams, Cillian Murphy, and Brian Cox. The story follows a hotel manager ensnared in an assassination plot by a terrorist while aboard a red-eye flight to Miami.
The film received Craven's best reviews in years, and was a box office success, earning almost $100 million. While he is fine with people loving it, Cillian Murphy is not really fond of the film, "I love Rachel McAdams and we had fun making it but I don’t think it's a good movie. It’s a good B movie."
  • Budget: $26,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $57,891,803. ($92.5 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $96,258,201.

My Soul to Take (2010)

"Only one has the power to save their souls."
His 19th film. It stars Max Thieriot, Denzel Whitaker, Raul Esparza, and Shareeka Epps. It follows Adam "Bug" Hellerman, who is one of seven teenagers chosen to die following the anniversary of a serial killer's death.
This was Craven's first film in almost two decades where he would be directing, producing and writing. But that didn't pan out to a success: it was a critical and commercial dud.
  • Budget: $25,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $14,744,435. ($21.1 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $21,500,813.

Scream 4 (2011)

"New decade. New rules."
His 20th and final film. The fourth installment in the Scream franchise, it stars David Arquette, Neve Campbell, Courteney Cox, Emma Roberts, Hayden Panettiere, Anthony Anderson, Alison Brie, Adam Brody, Rory Culkin, Marielle Jaffe, Erik Knudsen, Mary McDonnell, Marley Shelton, Nico Tortorella, and Roger L. Jackson. The film takes place on the fifteenth anniversary of the original Woodsboro murders from Scream and involves Sidney Prescott returning to the town after ten years, where Ghostface once again begins killing students from Woodsboro High.
In 2010, Williamson and Craven confirmed their plans for a new film. Craven said that endless sequels, the modern spew of remakes, film studios, and directors are the butts of parodies in the film. The main characters have to figure out where the horror genre is in current days to figure out the modern events happening to and around them. This was the first film in the franchise to use CGI, with the knife's blade added in post-production.
Even though the franchise was profitable, it seemed like its glory days were long behind it by the time it hit theaters. The film disappointed in its opening weekend with just $18 million, and closed with a weak $97 million worlwide, far less than the previous films. It also received mixed reviews, particularly for its writing and new characters. It was the last film directed by Craven before his death in 2015.
  • Budget: $40,000,000.
  • Domestic gross: $38,180,928. ($53 million adjusted)
  • Worldwide gross: $97,231,420.

MOVIES (FROM HIGHEST GROSSING TO LEAST GROSSING)

No. Movie Year Studio Domestic Total Overseas Total Worldwide Total Budget
1 Scream 1996 Dimension Films $103,046,663 $70,000,000 $173,046,663 $15M
2 Scream 2 1997 Dimension Films $101,363,301 $71,000,000 $172,363,301 $24M
3 Scream 3 2000 Dimension Films $89,143,175 $72,691,101 $161,834,276 $40M
4 Scream 4 2011 Dimension Films $38,180,928 $59,050,492 $97,231,420 $40M
5 Red Eye 2005 DreamWorks $57,891,803 $38,366,398 $96,258,201 $26M
6 A Nightmare on Elm Street 1984 New Line Cinema $25,624,448 $31,560,686 $57,185,134 $1.1M
7 Vampires in Brooklyn 1995 Paramount $19,751,736 $15,200,000 $34,951,736 $14M
8 The People Under the Stairs 1991 Universal $24,204,154 $7,143,000 $31,347,154 $6M
9 Cursed 2005 Miramax $19,297,522 $10,324,200 $29,621,722 $100M
10 The Hills Have Eyes 1977 Vanguard $25,000,000 $0 $25,000,000 $700K
11 My Soul to Take 2010 Universal $14,744,435 $6,756,378 $21,500,813 $25M
12 Wes Craven's New Nightmare 1994 New Line Cinema $18,090,181 $1,631,560 $19,721,741 $8M
13 The Serpent and the Shadow 1988 Universal $19,595,031 $0 $19,595,031 $7M
14 Shocker 1989 Universal $16,554,699 $0 $16,554,699 N/A
15 Music of the Heart 1999 Miramax $14,859,394 $77,013 $14,936,407 $27M
16 Deadly Friend 1986 Warner Bros. $8,988,731 $0 $8,988,731 $11M
17 Deadly Blessing 1981 United Artists $8,279,042 $0 $8,279,042 $3M
18 The Last House on the Left 1972 Hallmark Releasing $3,100,000 $0 $3,100,000 $90K
19 Swamp Thing 1982 Embassy $2,500,000 $0 $2,500,000 N/A
He made 20 films, but only 19 have reported box office numbers. Across those 19 films, he made $994,016,071 worldwide. That's $52,316,635 per film.

The Verdict

Quite inconsistent, but a very iconic figure in the horror genre. You know you made it big when your creations include Elm Street and Scream. Craven often struggled with difficult productions (you can blame the Weinsteins for that), but he still managed to make competent and scary films, even if some are better than others. Some even see critical re-appraisal as time passes; even Scream 3 and Scream 4 have their fans. We don't know what he would've done with the franchise after the fourth film, but he made it clear he was exhausted by having to film without finished scripts. Rest in Peace to a horror legend.
Hope you liked this edition. You can find this and more in the wiki for this section.
The next director will be Clint Eastwood. I think I'll have to make two posts, given that he directed 42 films.
I asked you to choose who else should be in the run and the comment with the most upvotes would be chosen. Well, we'll later talk about... Ang Lee. A legendary Asian director.
This is the schedule for the following four:
Week Director Reasoning
May 13-19 Clint Eastwood Great actor. Great director.
May 20-26 Robert Zemeckis Can we get old Zemeckis back?
May 27-June 2 Richard Donner An influential figure of the 70s and 80s.
June 3-9 Ang Lee What happened to Lee?
Who should be next after Lee? That's up to you. And there's a theme.
And that theme is: controversial directors. I'm talking directors who have attained a polarizing response to their films (like Zack Snyder), or the directors themselves are also controversial figures in real life (like Oliver Stone). Basically, a director that has as many fans as haters.
submitted by SanderSo47 to boxoffice [link] [comments]


2024.05.11 13:31 underated41 My Brush with Mirrored Obsession

My Brush with Mirrored Obsession
The Allure of the Looking Glass: A Bewitching Exploration of Mirrored Narcissism (or How I Almost Got Lost in My Reflection) The antique shop window beckoned with a siren song – a kaleidoscope of forgotten treasures and whispered stories. Drawn by an invisible force, I wandered inside, drawn to a particular object: a tarnished silver hand mirror, its surface reflecting a distorted version of my own face.
The allure was immediate. Perhaps it was the intricate scrollwork adorning its frame, or the air of mystery it exuded. Maybe it tapped into a deeper fascination, a secret yearning to unlock some hidden truth about myself. Whatever the reason, I felt compelled to possess it. From the moment it slipped into my palm, my world began to tilt on a shimmering axis.
The first few days were innocent enough. I found myself glancing into the mirror more frequently, captivated by the play of light and shadow on my features. It felt like a harmless indulgence, a moment of self-discovery amidst the daily grind. But a subtle shift began to occur. The mirror became more than a reflective surface; it transformed into a portal, a gateway into a world where I was the sole inhabitant.
Makeup routines became elaborate rituals, each brushstroke a meticulous attempt to shape an idealized version of myself. Hours melted away as I experimented with hairstyles and outfits, mesmerized by the ever-changing image staring back. Compliments, once fleeting rewards, became the validation I craved. The real world, with its messy complexities, began to fade, replaced by the controlled perfection of the mirrored realm.
The turning point came during a social gathering. Friends' conversations faded into background noise as I fixated on my reflection in a nearby window. Laughter lines, previously invisible, seemed etched deeply across my face. A wave of panic washed over me – was this all I was? A collection of perceived flaws reflected back from a cold, unforgiving surface?
The realization hit me like a physical blow. My fascination had morphed into a dangerous obsession, trapping me in a narcissistic prison of my own making. With a newfound resolve, I tucked the mirror away in a dusty corner of my room. It was time to reclaim the world beyond the glass, a world filled with genuine connections and imperfect beauty.
The experience, though unsettling, was ultimately a stark lesson in self-awareness. The mirror may have revealed distorted versions of myself, but it also served as a reflection of a deeper truth – the human need for connection and the dangers of self-absorption. The allure of the looking glass remains, a reminder of that fragile balance between introspection and narcissism.
While I may not have discovered some hidden truth about myself staring into that antique mirror, I did rediscover the value of looking beyond the surface, both in myself and the world around me. And that, in itself, is a reflection worth cherishing.
submitted by underated41 to u/underated41 [link] [comments]


2024.05.11 11:40 CriticalChest638 Short Black Hair Yuna for next comeback in February 2025.

Short Black Hair Yuna for next comeback in February 2025.
Yuna of ITZY is known for her iconic short black hair, and fans are eagerly anticipating her look for the group's next comeback in February 2025. With her stylish and versatile hair, Yuna always manages to captivate fans with her unique fashion sense and impeccable style. Whether she's rocking a sleek bob or adding some edgy layers, Yuna's short black hair perfectly complements her stunning visuals and adds a touch of sophistication to her overall look. As the comeback date approaches, fans can't wait to see the new hairstyle Yuna will unveil, as she continues to set trends and inspire fashion choices among K-pop enthusiasts worldwide.
submitted by CriticalChest638 to Kpoppredictions [link] [comments]


2024.05.11 09:35 KitsuneKid99 After Luke's Season 5 retrospective, I decided to make a ranking of my own.

After Luke's Season 5 retrospective, I decided to make a ranking of my own.
All of these are my opinions. I don't expect anyone to agree with me, especially on a season as divisive as this.
Episode Ranking (From Favorite to Least Favorite, start at the bottom):
  1. Sing a Song of Patrick - 10/10: ♪TWINKLE TWINKLE PATRICK STAR; I MADE MYSELF A SANDWICH; MY MOMMY NAMED IT FRED; IT TASTES LIKE BEANS AND BACON... THIS SONG IS OVER EXCEPT FOR THIS LINE: YOU WIN THIS ROUND, BROCCOLI!!♪ Ok, this may be my favorite, but Spy Buddies is a very close second for me. The song is unironically better than most modern songs in my opinion. The reason this is my favorite is because of its moral of there being people who like your work and others who don't. Not to mention the visual gags and reaction humor here give Something Smells a run for its money. It honestly deserves its divisive reputation in an already very divisive season.
  2. Spy Buddies - 10/10: If you thought this season couldn't be a good one after a botched start with Waiting and Fungus Among Us, this one literally blows everything out of the water. The spy stuff is so awesome here too. What would you do if you could fire a laser out of your butt? Add in comedy on the level seen in Seasons 2 and 3, and you have what is one of the best episodes of not just Season 5, but of the entire series.
  3. Krabs à la Mode - 10/10: This episode is simply fantastic. Coming from a place where it doesn't even snow, I love these types of stories. I probably shouldn't because for those who deal with snow know how much of a pain in neck it is. The creativity, humor and visuals make this episode such a COOL experience. Fun Fact: This episode taught little kid me that there are numbers below zero.
  4. Roller Cowards - 10/10: For those who are terrified of going on roller coasters, this'll definitely encourage you to face that fear. The storyboard directors did their research by taking a trip to Disneyland and putting in elements from that to make Glove World feel more like an authentic theme park. Similar to the trilogy in Season 4, it explores how close Sponge and Pat's friendship is, and there's strong comedy.
  5. Blackened Sponge - 10/10: You know those "If you laugh, you lose" videos on YouTube? Try doing that with this episode. I bet dollars to donuts you'll lose. Seriously, the ways SpongeBob makes up how he got his black eye are so hysterical. I could say more, but it's better if you see for yourself.
  6. SpongeBob vs. The Patty Gadget - 10/10: Here we have a story about man versus machine. It isn't much, but now the theme is very routine. Ok, you know what? I'll stop with the rhyming before you think it's Dr. Seuss who's writing. All that aside, jokes, a great story and a relevant theme for these days make this the best short of the season.
  7. The Battle of Bikini Bottom - 10/10: This is probably the best use of gross-out in this season, and more time is dedicated to the Sponge vs Pat fight than in Snowball Effect. If you were entertained by this, you'll be blown away by a certain episode in Season 6 with a similar premise to this...
  8. The Inmates of Summer - 10/10: Everyone remembers this one because of the warden character. R. Lee Ermey of Full Metal Jacket fame gives a spectacular performance. Still, the episode isn't without its moments. For those who hated the songs in Atlantis SquarePantis, the "Together" song is a breath of fresh air for you.
  9. The Two Faces of Squidward - 9/10: OMG HANDSOME SQUIDWARD WOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!! Ok, that aside, the rest of the episode is great, and what Breath of Fresh Squidward should have been more like. I don't have much else to say other than I love this episode.
  10. 20,000 Patties Under the Sea - 9/10: The three main formulas of each episode merged into one episode. Strange how we have rarely ever seen submarines as a way of travel in this show. Also, I can't talk about this one without bringing up the scene where Plankton roasts an entire family on an open fire.
  11. Friend or Foe - 9/10: Y'all are probably getting sick of this, but more lore! One of the reasons why it's a 9 instead of a 10 is because I like ten more episodes more than this and it's not without its faults, such as Krabs and Plankton becoming enemies out of nowhere, but it's still a fan favorite that I can't give it a lower rating without being cancelled. Also, first time in the show we see Karen in mobile form.
  12. New Digs - 9/10: Man, this is so relatable. Have you ever wanted to more into your school so you wouldn't be late for your classes? I have, and thankfully that never happened, as it inconveniences those who work there.
  13. Mermaid Man vs SpongeBob - 9/10: Mermaid Man and Barnacle Boy are here, and it was only a matter of time before Plankton teamed up with them. Another funny one with the first appearance of Mobile Karen... with arms.
  14. The Krusty Plate - 9/10: SpongeBob vs A Spot that won't come off of a plate. It's simple, yet so funny because of how it escalates.
  15. The Donut of Shame - 9/10: Patrick having a guilty conscience? This is pretty much the inverse of the Pink Purloiner from the previous season, and just like it, it has great jokes that all land.
  16. Pest of the West - 8/10: YEEHAW, more SquarePants family lore! Ok, this western is clichéd to hell and back, but it has its charms and humor.
  17. The Krusty Sponge - 8/10: Aaron Springer, welcome back! Anyway, this is probably the most meta and self-aware the main show has been, and seems like a precursor to those " portrayed by SpongeBob" videos on YouTube.
  18. Slimy Dancing - 8/10: SpongeBob, Patrick and Squidward in a dancing competition. Not much to say here, it funny and engaging. First of two times they show an epilogue, for those who care.
  19. Money Talks - 8/10: Mr. Krabs befriends the concept of capitalism and they want to be spent. Good episode all around, and the Flying Dutchman appearing is always welcome.
  20. Goo Goo Gas - 8/10: This episode is so stupid and written out-of-order, but it's hilarious, so who cares?
  21. The Original Fry Cook - 7/10: More Krusty Krab lore? This one's good, and gives out more life lessons. I like how Squidward had a wig in the flashback. Kinda makes sense now why he didn't laugh at SpongeBob's wig back in Wigstruck.
  22. Bucket Sweet Bucket - 7/10: Hey, Plankton's renovating the Chum Bucket, except no, he's using this to distract the Sponge, Starfish and Octopus while he tries to steal the formula. But there are some funny bits here and there that keep me from losing interest.
  23. Boat Smarts - 7/10: This episode is actually good once you kick the "SqUiDwArD tOrTuRe PoRn" argument into a bottomless pit. I actually see this as a fact that the safest drivers aren't safe, especially from reckless drivers.
  24. Picture Day - 7/10: The only time we see Mrs. Puff's Boating School in the entire season. The whole episode is fine, funny and based on Dani Michaeli's daughter's bad picture day in preschool.
  25. Rise and Shine - 7/10: Ever wanted to know what Patrick's mornings are like? Well, this is it. Pretty funny, too.
  26. To Save a Squirrel - 7/10: Don't let the title fool you, this one's actually about Sponge and Pat trying to eat each other... at least it's entertaining.
  27. Banned in Bikini Bottom - 6/10: More Krusty Krab episodes... *yawn* I like how this is a parody of Prohibition and there are a couple of jokes, but otherwise, it's decent.
  28. Night Light - 6/10: I used to like this one... when I was younger. This isn't bad at all. The last couple of minutes are rather messy, (what is Luke Skywalker of all people doing here?) but it's fine.
  29. Atlantis SquarePantis - 6/10: GODDAMMIT, WASTED POTENTIAL! But seriously, this episode does have a bad reputation among the cartoon community and I can see why, but if it was made as a TV Movie instead of an 11-minute episode without the Nickelodeon executives butting in, most of the problems wouldn't be there. All that said, the story is lackluster, but the visuals are eyecandy, no one acts out of character, some decent comedy is sprinkled in here and there and those, combined with the Patchy segments, make up for the flaws. This simply needed more time in the oven.
  30. Le Big Switch - 6/10: I do like the exchange concept and this is the only time we hear Pearl in this season. I would say see, but she only appears in a phone call. I can't remember anything else.
  31. Stanley S. SquarePants - 6/10: More SquarePants family lore? Cool. Oh, wait he screws up everything. At least there are some jokes. I like how Squidward hightailed out of the episode the instant he saw Stanley. "THERE'S TWO OF THEM?!"
  32. SpongeHenge - 6/10: I am very mixed on this one. I do like the concept, but it could've been funnier.
  33. BlackJack - 6/10: I like seeing more of SpongeBob's family, but why is BlackJack so tiny at the end? Did he get size reduction surgery so he could fit in the prison cells easier?
  34. A Flea in her Dome - 5/10: The only major Sandy episode in the season. Whatever. Some chuckle-worthy bits here and there. A flea giving birth... Uh... I didn't need to see that.
  35. Good Ol' Whatshisname - 5/10: What's it to ya? I don't remember anything from this one.
  36. Breath of Fresh Squidward - 4/10: This isn't how to do a role-reversal story. At least SpongeBob tries to apologize after he makes Squidward leave, and I find Patrick and SpongeBob becoming Squidward at the end stupid but funny. Pat Hearts Squid is a better version of this.
  37. Pat no Pay - 4/10: Patrick screws up tasks after he can't pay for his meal. At least it's short.
  38. Waiting - 4/10: Okay, boring episodes like these aren't that bad because there's less bad material to talk about. SpongeBob = Selfish Asshat, but at least there's a couple of funny bits here and at least Squidward helps him in the end.
  39. To Love a Patty - 3/10: In my opinion, this is the first episode that feels... wrong. And more unpleasant gross-out... and SpongeBob killing clams (I highly doubt one of them was Junior, but I digress). At least there are jokes here and I have an embarrassing secret about this episode I do not wish to share. LMAO
  40. Fungus Among Us - 2/10 (Almost a 3/10): The only thing funny about this episode is its title; Just remove Fungus. Joking aside, while this episode is gross, my main gripe with the episode is that there are barely any jokes, but at least the story barely functions. If I'm being honest, Kwarantined Krab from Season 12 did this concept way better. It doesn't help that this episode led to people assuming that the entire post-movie era is all gross-out.
  41. What Ever Happened to SpongeBob? - 1/10 (Almost a 2/10): The title kinda sums up the episode, huh? The only parts I like are the battle with the Bubble Poppin' Boys (They deserved more screentime), Patrick casually lifting an entire road in one scene and Squidward throwing away his brain at the end. Those aside, the episode's story is so messy. It's too mean-spirited (Squidward and Mr. Krabs aren't as affected by this as much as Patrick and Sandy though) with no emotional buildup which makes the conflict feel unnatural. Also, SpongeBob getting amnesia makes the story fall apart if you think about it, because if he can't remember anything, specifically his friends lashing out at him which was his motive for running away in the first place, and it doesn't change his personality either, so what was the point? At least Sandy, Patrick and Mr. Krabs realize the error of their ways even if it took them reading SpongeBob's note to do so and it isn't the worst thing in the world.
Season Overall - 7/10: This used to be my favorite season as a little kid... But not anymore. The quality feels so turbulent. This season actually feels very different from Season 4, when a lot of people clump that and this season together. It feels more like a transition from the first four seasons to the so-called "dark era" of Seasons 6-9A. That makes more sense because a lot of the problems that plague those seasons started here after a couple of them were mostly laying dormant since Season 2. I still like the season in spite of all its flaws.
Tier List:
https://preview.redd.it/157yfrnigpzc1.png?width=1140&format=png&auto=webp&s=6c85a641abe395b91495bd6b5c4feaa8186034ee
submitted by KitsuneKid99 to spongebob [link] [comments]


2024.05.10 23:56 Upstairs-Nebula-9375 What to do with shoulder length hair?

I am currently growing my hair out, and I anticipate it will be roughly shoulder length in time for my wedding. I usually have it cut in a short, trendy hairstyle, but I have not cut it lately because I want to maximize options since I have not decided yet.
I am concerned that if I cut it into a trendy style it will look dated in the future. I know nothing is really timeless and most things eventually look dated, but I don't want to look back at something so specific to a particular stylistic era that it makes me go "what on earth was I thinking?" in the future.
However, if I let it grow, I don't know if, at roughly shoulder length, it will really be long enough for most wedding-y styles. Another option would be to cut it short again, but into a more classic pixie cut or bob that is less 2024 specific.
This is my dress: https://catherinedeane.com/products/lita-gown-1
This is my a picture that is similar normal hair (this is a model, not me!): https://cdn-blog.prose.com/1/2022/01/Screen-Shot-2022-01-19-at-4.33.09-PM.png
submitted by Upstairs-Nebula-9375 to weddingplanning [link] [comments]


2024.05.10 21:42 Drdoozies Thick hair advice.

Hello! Need some advice on product. I have VERY thick hair and am having trouble finding the right product to use. My hairstyle is kind of a messy pushed back hairstyle that I mostly do with a comb and then run my fingers through to get a more natural look.
My issue is no matter what product I use my hair ends up looking dry throughout the day because I’m constantly trying to push my hair back as it doesn’t want to hold. I’ve tried reel pink which probably works the best so far in achieving a non dry hair look lol but is difficult to use. Also tried savior pomade and old spice (very basic stuff I know lol) and those keep my hair from drying out but doesn’t hold.
I would like a product that keeps my hair looking healthy or “moisturized” if that makes sense? While also maintaining the style I like without having to fix it all day.
Any tips are appreciated thank you!
submitted by Drdoozies to Pomade [link] [comments]


2024.05.10 19:47 BeneficialInjury5820 How the hell im going to get rid of my middle part?

As the title says, i had a middle part for a long while, around 2 or 3 years. I decided to try other hairstyles, shorter and more spiky or messy but that partition always bleeds through my "styling" process...If anyone knows a method i'll gladly take it...
submitted by BeneficialInjury5820 to malehairadvice [link] [comments]


2024.05.10 16:29 WorriedReputation3 Should I add texture to my hair or leave it straight? If so what hair texture products would you recommend.

Should I add texture to my hair or leave it straight? If so what hair texture products would you recommend.
I’ve got naturally straight hair that goes straight down so it’s hard to maintain hairstyles such as side parts or any hairstyle that requires my hair to be combed in a different direction. Because of this I have decided to stick with a crop top. But this hairstyles gives my fringe a sort of bowl cut look. I tried to cut my fringe messy to make it less straight but then I just ended up with a barcode looking fringe, so the only thing I haven’t tried yet is hair texturing products
submitted by WorriedReputation3 to malehairadvice [link] [comments]


2024.05.10 16:24 cosmogoblin [F] How being an influencer turned into a deadly game of cat-and-mouse

This story was originally written July 2023.
You might have heard of me. I was a social media influencer for two years.
I know kids have “influencer” as one of their top professions these days, but for me it was all an accident, really. I uploaded a few YouTube videos back in 2019, in the summer I finished school. All I did was rant about movies. I had a few notes, not a full script, and just spouted off to my laptop camera about inaccurate science, bad casting choices, real nitpicky stuff. In about six months I’d got 200 subscribers.
I was at university then, and I mentioned my videos to some of my uni friends. They subbed and told their friends, and I got up to 1,000 sub by January 2020. My videos were only about ten minutes long, and I had nowhere near the views to monetise. I was making one a week, but not on any sort of schedule. It was just something I did when I was bored.
Then the pandemic hit. A lot of students here in England basically got locked into their halls of residence (that’s dorms for any Americans reading), but I was lucky enough to get back to my parents’ before then. So I was doing what my uni laughably called “remote learning”, which basically meant a couple of video lectures a week, some worksheets, and lots and lots of my own research. I won’t bore you with the topic of my course; it’s not relevant.
I’m not exactly stereotypically pretty. I’ve come to accept that. My hair is stringy, my nose is too big, my face is profoundly asymmetrical, my complexion is strange and acned, my teeth are crooked … You get the idea. You can only do so much with makeup and hair that covers your face. I probably have fewer friends than I would if I looked like other people, and it actually took a lot of courage to make that first video - and even more courage to upload it.
I can only assume that’s the reason I went viral. It certainly wasn’t the high production values, or the tightly-written scripts, or the quality of my research. On the 9th of April I had 1,322 subscribers. On the 10th it was over 8,000. By the end of April it was up to 300,000, and I had actually monetised my channel.
The comments were … well, they were varied. Lots of hate because of my looks, but lots of love from people who just appreciated what I put out there, calling out others for their negative comments. I know many social media stars struggle with unkind comments, but I’d got used to it. Let’s be honest, they weren’t nice, but neither were they untrue. And comments under your video are easier to ignore than comments in the street. I was making decent money after all. If you were one of those commenters, you know which side you were on, and I love you either way. Thanks for the engagement - it’s not easy to gain financially from your unusual appearance!
The trouble with going viral is that it doesn’t last. Competing in the fast-paced world of internet stardom takes a lot of effort. I started experimenting with other things - YouTube shorts, TikTok, Instagram, pretty much anything going. The format that turned out to work best was actually TikTok. I’d bought some skimpy outfits and did ridiculous little dances. I quickly reached over a thousand views per video, and while I wasn’t up to their creator tier, it still worked. A well-known cosmetics company asked to sponsor my videos.
Cosmetics! Me! I guess they were going for woke points or something. I didn’t care, they offered me more money than I knew what to do with, as long as my views stayed high. So I started making 2-minute videos. A dance without make-up, then I applied the make-up - being sure to show the brand name clear and up-close - and then the same dance with make-up. If this is ringing any bells with you, then yes - that was me. And no, stupid - that’s not my real name.
I’d got used to undesired attention of course. Along with the unpleasant comments, I got my fair share of unwelcome male approaches. For a few hours after any upload, about half of my DMs were from men, and some women (or men with female account names), asking to see more of me. I wasn’t a camgirl, though I suppose I wasn’t a million miles away from one; but I could have been. I did seriously consider it a few times, but never actually followed through.
And half of the rest of my DMs, and a good portion of the public comments, were from angry women. What made me think I had the right to show off like that? How could I bring their favourite cosmetics brand into disrepute? But I’ve got pretty thick skin (hey, I can make that joke, you can’t), and mostly laughed the comments off and ignored them.
That was, in hindsight, a mistake.
By September my uni was reopening for in-person teaching. I was working six or seven hours a day just to keep up with everything, and had a couple more brands sponsoring me. Being an influencer isn’t just about filming for ten minutes a day and watching the money come in!
So I was going to tutorials an hour a day, watching video lectures at 2x speed, and ignoring my assignments in favour of making videos and replying to messages. It’s not like my pointless degree was helping with my real job.
Okay fine. It was geology. Rocks and stuff. You happy now? I bet you can’t tell the difference between sylvite and carnallite just by licking it, can you?
Anyway, the point is I came close to being chucked out. Actually I had to repeat the second year. At least I could afford it.
So anyway, I somehow got through to the end of my second year, the end of my second year again, and part way through my third year. I was passing my exams - just - and through several reinventions I had managed to maintain my social influencer role. Last Autumn I was getting some good views, and cash, back on YouTube. I was getting pretty good at make-up (I had an exclusive deal with one company on TikTok, and another deal with a different cosmetics company on YouTube). The videos that did well then were me with experimental hairstyles and not much in the way of clothes, putting on makeup for a few minutes, then reading out-of-copyright fiction in my patented “YouTube voice”. If you can imagine a cross between Shania Twain and Marge Simpson then… well, then you’re weird, but you’ve pretty much got it.
Then, last December, a week or so before the Christmas holidays, I went out with my friends. I had made a decent number, both girls and guys, by then. I could never quite tell whether it was my personality (which I assure you is fantastic), my influencer status, or the cash I was liberal with (it always seemed to be my round, and I didn’t mind). There were even a couple of boys who were keen on me, though I hadn’t done anything about it yet. Eight of us went out together to celebrate a birthday. It wasn’t actually anybody’s birthday that day, but Shireen had a Christmas Day birthday, and she wanted a proper party.
Now I look quite different in real life than I do online. I think the technical term is “frumpy” - jeans, trainers, fluffy jumper and a hat, or maybe a hoodie. The birthday girl had somehow convinced me to put a bit more effort in, and had helped me pick out some heels and a knee-length silver dress. Make-up was easy for me of course, and so I got dressed up and off we went to the Black Swan.
The Black Swan has several great qualities about it. One: it’s cheap. Two: it does good food. Three: it’s a couple of hundred metres from The Bar. We had a decent meal, a few drinks, and around 9 we walked to The Bar.
To be more precise, they walked. I wobbled. If you’ve watched my videos you might have seen me in heels, but did you ever see me walk in them? Didn’t think so.
The Bar is open til 3 in the morning. It looks respectable enough from the outside, especially in the afternoon; but after about 11, when most pubs close, it fills up with students drinking expensive-looking drinks. And almost every night, somebody jumps up onto a table, and then everybody’s up there dancing. In The Bar, either you hold your drink tightly, or you lose it.
I’d done this before, and I can handle my alcohol. I’ve stayed at The Bar till chuckout more than a few times, and I’ve been wobbly on the way home, but I’ve never thrown up or passed out. And so I was surprised when I woke up. The last thing I remembered was Stu saying he was tired, and Shireen replying that it wasn’t even midnight yet. Now I was lying on the hard wooden floor of my living room.
My head pounded. Daylight streamed through the window, and I blinked a few times and rubbed my eyes. My hands were wet and sticky.
I looked at them. They were covered in blood.
I looked down. My heels were across the room, but I was still wearing my dress. It, also, was covered in blood, a huge stain across the chest.
Panic set in. What happened to me last night? I checked myself out and could find no injuries. Where did the blood come from?
Standing up, I realised it was worse than that. Red pools stained the wooden floor. I don’t know much medicine, but if somebody had lost this much blood, I couldn’t see how they could have survived.
I stood up, unsure whether my shaking was from the shock or the alcohol. This was when I saw a shirt on the floor behind me. White, with a subtle pattern. I’m sure I don’t need to tell you that it wasn’t my shirt. I lived alone, and rarely invited people back to my flat. I looked around some more. A pair of men’s black leather shoes by the door. And then I saw it.
I suppose, rather, I should say him. He was naked except for a pair of dark blue jeans, slumped in the open doorway to the kitchen, covered in blood, and very, very, dead.
I panicked then. I’m calmer now, so let’s take a moment to describe my conclusions that morning. I had got very drunk. I had met a guy. We’d come back to my flat. We’d been getting naked (the shoes and shirt weren’t bloodied). Then, for some reason, we’d had an argument or a fight. The body had stab wounds in the chest, and a pool of blood had congealed onto the wooden floor of the living room and the linoleum of the kitchen where the man collapsed. How did those stab wounds get there? I didn’t know for sure, but a quick glance at my kitchen counter showed that my sharp carving knife was missing. It was all coming together. I didn’t know if he had picked up the knife, or if I had; I didn’t know why either of us would do that. I didn’t even know his name, and later when I checked his pockets, I couldn’t find any ID.
There was a lot I didn’t know. But I’m smart. So once I was done crying on the floor (I think it was about two hours), I came up with a plan. This man was dead, and I couldn’t do anything about that. But what would the consequences be? There’s no need for my life to be ruined as well. I decided not to call the police. People go missing mysteriously all the time, he can just be another statistic and I’ll get on with my life.
The blood on Dave was mostly dry by now. (Sure, I didn’t know his name, but every bloke’s called Dave, right?) So I put a badly-fitting vest on him to soak up the remaining blood, and his shirt over the top, along with his shoes. His jeans were bloody, but they were dark, so hopefully it wouldn’t show up in low light. I couldn’t find his coat, which was odd given how cold it was, but this would have to do. I put my dress and heels in a plastic bag, and grabbed a spade that I never used. Had I missed anything?
The knife. The fucking knife. I searched all over for it, but by the time it got dark I still hadn’t found it. I knew I couldn’t delay for long, so I figured it was best to deal with Dave now, and find the knife later.
Eight o’clock in the evening came. I’m lucky I have parking right outside my house, no street cameras, and a ground-floor flat. I put the bag in the boot of my car and came back for the body.
Have you ever tried to move a dead person? It’s not easy, and I’m not exactly strong. I put my arm around his waist and eventually managed to heave him almost upright. “Come on Dave, that’s it. We’re gonna get you home. Maybe calm down on the tequila next time right? Try to keep it in, and don’t you dare vomit in my car, you sexy bastard.”
Oh come on, what do you want from me? I’m an influencer, not a stand-up comedian. And anyway, I don’t think anybody saw me during the several minutes it took to drag Dave to the passenger seat. I really wish I’d got round to buying a bigger car than the Fiat Punto I’d had since I was 18, but it was too late for that now.
There’s a place about an hour’s drive from me called Epping Forest. The Heritage Trust reckon it’s most famous for its huge tracts of unspoiled wildlife, thousands of trees, and Iron Age settlements. But around here it’s best known as the place where murderers and gang members bury bodies. So off I trundled in my 1.2 litre pensioner-mobile. I arrived around 9:30, checked Google Maps, and drove offroad into the woods.
Do you know how long it takes to dig a grave? The answer is: a long time! By dawn I’d only managed a hole about two feet. Oh, and it was my third try, because the first two times I found too much rock. Well, it would have to do. In went Dave, and I shovelled the ground back over him. I thought I could put my clothes in with him, but it was a shallow grave, and when the inevitable dog-walker finds it I didn’t want them linked back to me. I mean, there’s my DNA in there for sure, but let’s not make it too easy for them, right? So I chucked the spade in a river, and the clothes went back home with me, including the vest I’d lent him.
Now in England we have a thing called ANPR everywhere. The police can just type in a car registration and see exactly where it’s been from traffic cameras. I needed an alibi. Why had I gone to Epping Forest? For a hike of course! So I walked around for a few hours, got breakfast at a pub, and told the staff about all the wacky adventures I’d had that night. And while I was there, for the first time in a good long time, I checked my phone.
Hundreds of messages, of course. But only one sent a shiver down my spine.
Jolly_Gal_56234
I KNOW WHAT YOU DID
My heart thumped. My ears started ringing. I felt dizzy, nearly passed out. How could anybody know?
Of course nobody knew. I actually got messages like this fairly often. Just some idiot trying to wind people up. They’d probably sent a dozen messages just like it, to random people, and I just blocked her. Still it rattled me. I finished my breakfast, paid up, walked back to my car, and drove home.
My flat was just as I left it. Dave was gone, but his blood was still there. I scrubbed the floor for hours, and it helped a bit, but you could still see the stains. Exhausted, I showered and went to bed.
The next morning I woke up. I hadn’t posted anything for a day and a half, so I needed to do something about that. Scrolling through my messages, one stood out like a police light.
Jolly_Gal_28473
YOU’VE BEEN A BAD GIRL 🔪
Shit. SHIT! What the fuck is going on? I stared at my phone, paralysed with indecision. When I finally snapped out of it I made sure the door was locked, and tried to come up with a plan.
I had no idea who was sending these. Maybe they didn’t really know anything. You send stupid messages like that to hundreds of people, you’re gonna come across one who’s actually done something bad, right? I poured myself a big glass of gin, decided that nobody could know anything, and made a video.
Remember that one where I didn’t speak at all, just danced for three minutes dressed like 90s Britney to 70s disco music, titled “HANGOVER DANCE”? Yeah, that’s the one. I didn’t trust myself to speak without breaking, but I could dance about as well as I ever could.
The rest of the day I answered messages, emailed my sponsors, and considered getting an agent. It’s still just me doing everything, and that Sunday afternoon, I really didn’t want to. I also spent a few hours scrubbing the wooden floor with baking soda and vinegar, and looking for the knife.
I kept getting messages from Jolly_Gal. It didn’t matter how much I blocked her, she just popped up again the next day with different numbers at the end of her username. Always all-caps, just a single sentence.
YOU DON’T DESERVE IT
YOU’LL GET WHAT’S COMING TO YOU
OWN UP
DELETE YOUR ACCOUNT
Exactly one message a day, but always at different times. I decided it was a bot, and it was just coincidence that it started when it did. Until Christmas Day.
I’d been back at my parents’ for a few days, and endured the usual conversations about what I was going to do for a “proper job” after uni. They’re great, and really supportive. They’ve just never understood what an “influencer” really is, and that “playing on my phone” for six hours a day counts as work. My brother Rich gets it, but the rest of my family is honestly baffled.
Anyway, Christmas morning comes. All four of us were in the house together (my brother’s 17 so he still lives there), and we gathered together in the living room opening presents. It was a couple of weeks since the incident, and I still had nightmares every night, and those sudden panic attacks - you know, when you’re sure you’re going to be found out - but I was getting used to it. It had happened, I couldn’t change it, and I’d have to keep it secret for the rest of my life; but it was becoming a sort of background hum. I don’t know if that’s too quick, but I suppose I’ve learned to handle difficulty in my life.
Until we finished opening presents and I checked my phone.
Jolly_Gal_814385
HAPPY CHRISTMAS
And underneath, a photo of my kitchen knife, stained with blood.
I ran out of the house in tears.
Rich found me, sitting on the wooden bridge down the road from the house, my legs dangling over the river. I came here a lot when I was a teenager, so it was the first place he looked. I’d left my phone on the living room floor, and the three of them had seen the message, so he knew what triggered me. He just didn’t know the full story.
Well, I told him. I mean, not everything, obviously. But I told him how this person had been harassing me for weeks. He listened sympathetically, like he’s always done, and asked if there was anything he could do to help. I didn’t say anything; I just turned around, hugged him, and cried into his Christmas sweater.
After about half an hour we went back to the house. Rich explained things to my parents, thank goodness. I don’t think I could have handled it.
The rest of the holiday was … okay, I guess. More messages from Jolly_Gal, but only text. I made videos most days, and met all two of my old schoolfriends for drinks, movies and shopping. They’re big fans of my channels. I even took Rich out for drinks one evening, though it took us four pubs to find somewhere that wouldn’t ID him. He’s a bit of a babyface.
I did all I could not to think about Dave. I put him to the back of my mind, letting him live in the shed at the bottom of the garden of my psyche where he couldn’t disturb me. I guess that’s why it came as a shock to me, when I packed my stuff into the boot of my car to head back to uni.
There was one suitcase I’d packed but hadn’t got round to taking into the house. And peeking around the edge was that plastic bag. I’d forgotten to get rid of it!
Dad was helping me load the car, so I couldn’t do anything about it. I tucked it out of sight, finished loading up, said goodbye, and drove back to uni. It was dark when I got back, so I unpacked everything else, triple-bagged my bloody clothes, left my phone at home (no tracking me!), and walked two miles to drop them into somebody else’s wheelie bin.
The next morning I checked my messages.
Jolly_Gal_12592
WELCOME HOME
And a photo of me dumping the bag the night before.
You know what? This didn’t bother me. I mean, it did bother me, but not as much as I guess Jolly_Gal hoped. I’ve been bullied and harassed most of my life, and I’ve got pretty good at ignoring it. Sure, it was an escalation - she was actually following me - but it was just one of almost thirty messages. Jolly_Gal was hoping to destroy me. Instead, she hardened my resolve.
Clearly she had enough evidence to go to the police, but she hadn’t. And obviously she lived nearby. Now I’m no hacker, but you don’t do a job like mine without learning your way around technology. So I started sleuthing. I hadn’t bothered blocking her after the third or fourth message, so I made a list of all the messages, including timecodes. I’ve got a geology degree (almost), and we have techniques to analyse rock strata. Finally I had a genuine use for all that studying I sort of did!
Jolly_Gal was not as clever as she thought. She’d got sloppy. About half of her messages were sent at strange hours, on the hour. These were presumably posted by her bot. But the other messages were all sent between 7 and 8 am, or between 6 and 10 pm. So I guessed that she has a normal 9-5 day job, or maybe she’s a student.
Next I searched all the social media sites I could think of for Jolly_Gal or JollyGal usernames. There are a few, so please don’t go harassing people with that username! I don’t want innocent people to get hurt. After a few hours I had profiles of all Jolly_Gals. Pictures, locations, partial travel history, even birthdays for some of them. I discounted those who clearly weren’t in England, but I still had too many to narrow it down. The photos had no EXIF data so I couldn’t tell the type of phone or camera they used.
So my days became something like this: Five hours doing uni stuff, five hours working on my socials, and an hour or two learning digital sleuthing. I still went out with my friends sometimes, but made sure not to drink too much. I know how to have a good time without being drunk!
The breakthrough came by total chance. I rarely read the local papers, and just got lucky one afternoon in March. I was waiting for a friend in the pub after lectures, and there was a copy of the Post somebody had left on a table. So I flicked through it. The local council was rubbish at doing traffic. Some group of OAPS was organising a May Day celebration. And a woman had been convicted of body-snatching.
I recognised her! There was a photo of a woman in her early twenties. She’d been arrested when a corpse went missing back in December, and they’d seen her take it on the morgue’s CCTV. She’d been released on bail. “Prevention of the lawful and decent burial of a dead body” is a rare crime these days, so she hadn’t been sentenced yet; instead she was released until her sentencing, expected to be in August. Her name was Jenny Smith, which is so common as to be almost useless - that is, if you don’t have a profile of her on your laptop at home!
The report also gave her address. So I started hatching a plan. I texted my friend that I wouldn’t make it, and went home.
Jolly_Gal, or rather, Jenny, lived near me, and actually went to the same university. She had accounts on Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, Twitter, and a few others. Of course you can’t get Jolly_Gal by itself these days, but my profile gave all her precise usernames. I spent my evening watching her videos and reading her tweets. And then I found the smoking gun.
Jenny had posted a video on TikTok last June bitching about me. She’s way prettier than me, and yet I’d got all the subs and follows. She deserved all those sponsorship deals. It wasn’t fair that I had hundreds of thousands of subs and she only had a few thousand. She even said I was ugly and deserved to die.
Well, she got one out of two right, I guess. You can decide which one.
It all started to slot into place. Jenny was absurdly jealous of me, so she’d hatched a plan to destroy me. She must have roofied me in The Bar, got me and Dave back to my place, stabbed him, poured blood everywhere, and taken the knife home. I mean, I don’t know anything about forensic science, and I was drugged and panicked when I woke up that morning. I’d have no way of knowing that Dave had died days before he ended up in my flat!
I’d never managed to get all the blood out of the wooden flooring, and ended up putting a really misplaced rug over it. I chiselled off a sample and gave it to one of my friends who was doing a PhD in biology. It took a bit of persuading, but he ran an analysis on it.
It was pig’s blood.
Fuck Jenny. She’s not Jenny, or Jolly_Gal, she’s fucking Carrie!
She planned to destroy me. She ruined my mental health, she framed me for murder. All because I was more popular on TikTok than she was. Well, two can play at that game. I didn’t deserve what Jenny did to me. She did.
I thought about this all night, coming up with plan after plan, weighing them in my head. I wanted two things: to destroy Jenny, and to feel good about it for myself. Finally I had a course of action I’m actually rather proud of.
I decided to start slow. I did something anybody could have done - I mocked up a poster. At the top was “Jenny Smith - body snatcher!”. Underneath were two pictures, her Insta profile pic and the courthouse photo from the paper, and between them: “From This … To This!” And all her various social media handles to top it off. I printed hundreds of these, and pinned them all around the university and her street.
I’ve never thought of myself as an unkind person - God knows I’ve suffered enough myself to be sympathetic to others. But I’m willing to admit I felt a lot of satisfaction seeing her comments fill up with accusations and links to the online article. Jenny carried on making videos, but I could tell she was suffering. Good!
That was stage one. I had to up the ante for stage two. Jenny had covered me and my flat with pig’s blood, so I think we all know what’s coming next.
I pondered for a long time whether I should do it in the day or the night. But you know what they say - go big or go home. I scoped out her house for a while, and found out that she leaves her kitchen window, at the back of the house, open. Now I’m not the most athletic girl in the world, but I can be pretty determined when I want to be. So one night around 2 am I walked to her house - it’s only about half a mile - and climbed through the window.
I almost gave myself a heart attack when I knocked a glass over on the kitchen sink! Luckily it didn’t smash. I hid in a corner and waited for a full half hour before I decided Jenny hadn’t heard me. Then I snuck upstairs, slow as anything, and crept into her room.
Actually, the first room wasn’t hers. She shared with a couple of other students. Thank fuck I checked first! The second room was the right one. She was asleep, alone, in a double bed. I was so quiet that the only thing I could hear was my heart pounding in my chest as I opened my canvas bag, gently deposited its contents onto the pillow next to her, and took a photo. It didn’t come out that well - I couldn’t use the flash - but hey, I have a souvenir!
I really wish I’d seen her face when she woke up the next morning, staring at a pig’s head. She didn’t post on her socials for a week after that, and for two days she even forgot to send me a threatening message.
I’m sorry? You think I’m done? Oh, my sweet summer child. I’ve barely begun.
Jenny had a boyfriend, Abdul. I made sure he wasn’t around when I broke in, but stage three involved him in a big way.
Abdul was also at our university, a year younger than me, a year older than Jenny. He wasn’t very active on social media, but he did tend to broadcast his activity on Twitter. And what do you know? He’s also a fan of The Bar. So I spent the next month planning my move. I bought a new clubbing dress and heels - hey, I kinda missed that outfit! - and asked around for the other thing I needed. Some things you can’t just buy in Next, or a local butcher’s, but eventually I managed it.
I got my chance one Friday in May. Abdul had loudly announced on Twitter that he was excited for his boys’ night out in The Bar, and Jenny had been gushing about a girls’ night on the whole other side of town. Perfect. I spent hours on my makeup, and got to The Bar around ten. Abdul and his mates were having a drinking contest, and leching up at the girls dancing on the tables.
I figured I had a good long while before he would be ready, so I had a couple of drinks - not too much, but like I said I can handle myself, and I knew Jenny wasn’t around - and got up on the tables myself for a bit. Then about midnight Abdul’s friend got another round in, while Abdul was in the loo. This was my chance. I walked up to their table - which had no dancing feet on it, but a heck of a lot of spilled beer - and started talking to them, saying I thought their friend was hot.
“Uh, what the fuck?” “Not a chance in hell.” “Get lost, freak!”
Lovely chaps. But they were too far gone to notice me dropping something into Abdul’s double-whiskey-and-coke. For all I know, it’s the exact same thing Jenny used on me all those months ago.
Abdul came back and downed his whiskey in one gulp. I was worried he was going to vomit it up, but he held it in and blamed his difficulty on the coke fizz. Yeah mate, sure, sure.
Not too long after, he started to fade. His friends were really taking the piss out of him for being such a lightweight. Well, when I came over, the pisstaking just got worse. I introduced myself (with a fake name, duh) and told him he was hot. Believe it or not, it was only about twenty seconds before he put his tongue down my throat. Wow, I’m not sure I even needed to bother with the roofie!
His friends, who had been so intent on being mean to me, now turned their attention to him. I suggested we ditch them and go back to his place (I’d checked, it was only five minutes’ walk sober) - and off we went.
That was the first time I had sex. I’m sure I don’t need to go into details, but we did a lot of stuff, and I enjoyed it. I’m not sure if that’s because it was good, or because he was good, or because I knew what it was all for. I was impressed that he managed to keep going as long as he did in his state, but I do feel a bit sorry for him; from his Twitter he seems like a decent guy.
When he finally fell asleep I left. I’d got what I came for - pictures. And the next day I made a new account and sent a DM to Jenny.
At first I blurred my face, or chose shots that didn’t include it. A bit of editing and I could have been anybody. I watched their messy breakup on Twitter, Jenny hurling accusations, Abdul protesting his innocence. I know this is the age of social media, but I never understood why people play these things out in public.
And then, after posting a picture a day for a few weeks (I’d taken a lot of pictures), I sent one that showed my face clearly.
Jenny had managed to restrain herself from replying before, but now she knew who I was. She was furious! The very idea that her boyfriend had cheated on her with ME, of all people, was unbelievable. And this was exactly the outcome I’d been going for.
Jolly_Gal was broken. She’d ruined her reputation. She’d lost her boyfriend. She had nightmares about pigs (okay, so I don’t know that for certain, but in my imagination she woke up screaming every night). She was possibly going to prison. And now she knew that not only was I more successful than her as an influencer, but I was the one to steal her lover. She still sent messages, at first angry, but they soon degenerated into pleading. “Please stop.” “I’m sorry.” “We can work this out.” Jolly_Gal without CAPS LOCK, it was glorious to see.
In fact it was almost perfect. Three stages of my plan were complete, and only one remained. Jenny’s sentencing was in three weeks, so I had to move quickly.
She had two flatmates, so I needed to work around them. They weren’t particularly active on Twitter, but Jenny was. I knew from her tweets that while her flatmates had gone home, she was staying on a couple of weeks after the end of term. She didn’t say why publicly, but it was for her trial. No flatmates, no boyfriend. Now was the time.
And that brings us up to date. I’ve typed this up over the last few days, and saved as a draft. The final chapter, hopefully, comes tonight.
*******
I’m at Jenny’s house, and I’ve just called the police.
I turned up at Jenny’s door just after seven. Luck was with me - she’d tweeted that she was expecting a Deliveroo takeout. And I got there first.
The idiot actually kept the knife. I’d seen it when I was in her room. When she answered the doorbell, expecting food, and saw me - ah, the look on her face was priceless.
“I’m so sorry! Please, let’s just talk. I didn’t mean it to get this -”
I stalked towards her, anger in my face. Jenny fled upstairs. Perfect! She went into her room and shut the door, but I was like the furies of Greek legend. I smashed the door in, and looked on as Jenny cowered on her bed.
In full daylight, I saw the knife took pride of place in what looked like a shrine. She had photos of me printed out, and she’d written on them “BITCH”, “WHORE”, “FREAK” and all sorts of other hateful words.
Jenny had tried to make me into a murderer, so I gave her what she wanted. I grabbed the knife and stood over her. The coward shrank into the bed, begging for forgiveness, pleading for her life. Unfortunately for her I was not inclined to oblige. I plunged the knife into her chest, just as she had done to Dave all those many months ago. Jenny whimpered like a whipped dog, and after the ninth stab (yes, I counted), she stopped.
The police are on their way. I’m definitely going to jail after this. But Jenny got what was coming to her. We could both have lived happily, but Jenny chose otherwise.
And me? I passed my degree. I have friends. And jail or not, I have a life.
Burn in hell, Jolly_Gal.
submitted by cosmogoblin to story [link] [comments]


http://swiebodzin.info