Hello, my name is Kathy Folger. I was an intern for the third season
of Wordgirl, and it was great until things took a turn for the worse.
The PBS station demanded more animation frames for the show to make the
animation flawless.
They told us that they wanted to convey a more animated series
than there others. So Soup2Nuts (The animation group I was interning
for) and the group that animated the show agreed. But they had never
done such a feat. So they all worked day and night to get everything
flowing right.
As the animators drew, some members of the animation team were
growing tired and the animation became more and more grotesque. I should
know; I was there giving out coffee and other things for the team. I
saw them from the sidelines, gathering together and conversing about an
episode they were animating. It was called "The Last Word", and it was
going to be to teach children more advanced words like usual.
When the head director brought all the animators to view the
episode, he told the one animation group who were animating the last
bits to bring the finalized version, but they did not respond. He went
to their cubicles, and when he got there they were all dead with blood
stains on the alleged tape. The hospital was called and they were sent
to the emergency room as soon as possible but it was too late; they died
of unknown causes. But we still had the tape so we decided to watch it
in their honor and their hard work they put into it. As we all went into
the viewing room, everything was suddenly very quiet. The screen
flickered on and a scene of Wordgirl started as usual.
First the upbeat theme song played, followed by opening sequence
and the title card, but when the featured word was spoken something was
wrong. The narrator sounded distorted and demonic in some way and the
words sounded backwards, like he was talking in tongues. We thought it
was just a sound glitch so we kept going and pulled through the rest of
the episode, but it did not get better. Characters started to loose
color and the animation became shocking real and plastiscene-like. It
showed Wordgirl, the beloved super hero, spitting out obscenities and
losing her cartoon style. We kept watching as the horror on the screen
unfolded.
As we watched, the dialogue started to become backwards and
static started to engulf the scene as unholy creatures which we could
barely make out appeared in the background. Wordgirl got worse as scenes
of blood-shot faces floated past her as she turned to the screen. Her
head went slowly around making a screeching sound as she turned. We all
sat there and as her eyes rolled upward her eyes and her mouth opened
and she made a sound. Some staff member said that she thought she heard
her say "From all good knowledge and power comes greatness", and the
staff member said she stopped there. But we did not listen to her. We
watched to the end, when it cut to a dark crimson red with a faded pale
mask-like face. It just stood there in the screen staring at us until it
open its mouth and letters in a jumbled order appeared. HHKTIELLCEILD
We all stopped watching it and the tape was gone. We couldn't
find it in the VCR anymore and we assumed nothing about it. We went back
to our daily lives, except for me. I never went back to the Soup2Nuts
team again. I heard rumors that the video still was not found and they
did not know why it disappeared in the VCR. I am now trying to forget
about it but it still haunts me every night and I still get flashes at
night of the face and the things which Wordgirl said. Well, this is the
end of my story and I have nothing else to say. I hear Wordgirl is still
making new episodes but I will never be apart of that again.
I've always loved Cartoon Network, when I was growing up it was my
favourite channel to watch. Even today it has some good shows, like
Adventure Time and Regular Show. One of the newest shows on the network,
The Amazing World of Gumball, is a cute and mildly entertaining show.
Not really my cup of tea, it's a little immature, but my little brother
seems to like it a lot.
One day, I was watching Adult Swim when I realized that I'd been up
so late that I hadn't even kept track of the time, it was already 4 AM. I
don't recall ever watching AS this late, so I stayed awake to see what
would happen when it ended. A little bumper showed up at the bottom of
the screen during a commercial break, it said that a special episode of
The Amazing World of Gumball was about to come on. I was a little
confused about an episode of a very popular, new show coming on this
early, but I was bored and decided I would watch it; thinking it might
come on later in the day so I could spoil it for my brother. Sort of
mean, I know.
The flashy and energetic intro theme played, although it was
played a little differently than I recall. The music was a little
different, and the show's logo wasn't animated, it's colours were done
rather sloppily as well, almost like something a little kid would do on a
Doodle Board or a Glow Board. I ignored it, assuming that it was done
just for this 'special' episode. The title of the episode was "The
Grieving", a sort of sad title, but I didn't really pay too much
attention.
It began with Gumball, the show's 12 year old protagonist,
standing alone facing a corner of his dimly-lit classroom. He looked
absolutely miserable, a far cry from the cheerful demeanor he usually
had. There was no one else in the room, not even his best friend and
adopted brother Darwin the goldfish, and the windows in the room clearly
showed the night sky outside. I was really starting to get confused,
why would he be at school at night, and why was he standing in the
corner all sad and alone?
After about what seemed like a minute of Gumball standing
somberly in the corner, the scene suddenly changed. We were in Gumball's
house, once again the scene is silent and a little disquieting.
Richard, Gumball's enormous rabbit father, walks in from the kitchen, he
looked even more miserable than Gumball had in the previous scene.
Richard isn't wearing his usual attire, he's dressed in a fancy black
suit, a little uncharacteristic of him, as he's usually a slob. He
sighs, and slumps down onto the sofa, and starts sobbing intensely,
sounding like someone who had just lost something important.
I was starting to get a little creeped out, where was the silly,
fun cartoon that I usually looked forward to watching with my younger
brother? This was something completely different. I was beginning to
think that this might have been something the creators did as an
experiment or something, a test of the animation or sound perhaps.
Though, it couldn't have been, aside from the opening theme, which was
still different from the final shows', the episode had been much quieter
than it usually was, only subtle sounds and very little music, and the
animation was not anything to write home about either. It was done a bit
like an amateur flash on Newgrounds, the character designs were
somewhat sloppy and rushed looking, and the real life backgrounds used
for the show looked different.
As confused and somewhat frightened as I was, for some reason, I
kept watching it. Poor Richard was still sobbing on the sofa, as the
front door opened suddenly, making me jump a bit at such a loud noise,
and Gumball's mother Nicole, a blue cat like him, stepped in. Like
Richard, she wasn't wearing her usual outfit, for some reason, she was
in a black dress and was wearing a pretty black hat to match. Nicole sat
down on the couch to comfort her husband, although she was looking a
bit saddened herself. By this point Richard's crying had began to get
more pained and miserable sounding, this wasn't the normal cartoon
crying on the show, this was realistic and almost depressing crying, I
almost felt like sobbing myself.
Finally,
after what seemed like hours, the sad scene at their home ended, as it
shifted back to the school. We weren't in Gumball's classroom this time,
we were in Principal Brown's office. Nicole and Richard were there, in
their usual clothes, looking more normal and happy than they had before,
but still slightly worried. Principal Brown however, looked extremely
sad. He quietly and somberly informed them that their children, Anais
and Darwin, were not present after lunch earlier that day. They hadn't
been seen at all the rest of the day. Nicole was instantly furious at
him, she began spouting various insults and calls at him that I don't
think would have made it on a more mature program like Regular Show. I
was laughing at this, because it seemed sort of funny for Nicole to flip
out in this manner and start swearing like a sailor in a G-rated
cartoon, but my outlook soon changed when Principal Brown told her
something else after she finally had quieted down.
His eyes began to tear up as he informed them that they eventually
were found, but they had not been found alive. He then went into graphic
and nearly nauseating detail describing how their bodies were found,
their parents sitting in utter shock. I could hardly believe what was
happening, how could such a cheery and fun kids show be taking such a
dark and twisted turn. I was considering turning the television off, but
I was too scared to be left in the dark by now, nearly frozen by fear
and disturbed intensely at the terrible things that he was saying.
Another flashback, the scene was earlier that day, and the animation in
this scene was even worse than earlier. I don't remember it very
clearly, but I think he began his recollection by saying that the school
had called the police department when they first turned up missing,
believing that the kids had simply ran off and decided to skip school.
They said it was very uncharacteristic of both Darwin and Anais to go
skipping school like delinquents, Darwin was a little naive and a bit
ditzy, but he was a good kid and wouldn't have even dreamed of doing
something like that, and Anais was even less likely to run away, she was
a straight-A student, despite being only four, which also troubled the
police, seeing as a defenseless four year old little girl was missing as
well as an older boy.
The school had been thoroughly checked, so the police started to
search the heavily wooded area outside of the school. It took little
time for the police to discover the horrifying fate of Anais. In a small
clearing outside of the school, Anais's head was found in a small box,
you likely would have expected something like that to be shown in the
show's cutesy art style, but it was nothing like that at all. Realistic
blood covered the box, inside and out, while Anais's head was done in
the normal style, but was drenched in blood and some other fluids, not
all of them hers apparently. There was a note in the box, seemingly
written in her blood. It was never stated during the episode what
exactly was written on the note, but it apparently lead to the rest of
her remains and Darwin's heavily mutilated corpse.
What I remember most about this scene was how out of place it
seemed. All the blood and gore from Darwin and Anais's slaughtered and
dismembered remains was done in a very realistic and disturbing way. It
looked like the scene had been taken from a crime scene photograph done
by a professional, not something from a cartoon. The way this scene was
animated was different from most of the show as well, you may know that
the characters from this series are done in vastly differing animation
styles, from Flash animation, to CGI, and I think that there's even a
character done by someone putting their chin upside-down to make a face.
This particular scene wasn't like anything I had ever seen on the show
before, every little detail on Darwin's face was clearly illustrated, he
looked a little like a zombie, his face was very pale and his eyes had
been gouged out by someone. Anais fared no better, or, what was left of
her anyway. She was naked and her stomach had been slit open, her
intestines were strewn around the trees and bushes in the woods, done
once again in a very morbid and realistic style.
I was feeling very ill by the time this incredibly disturbing
flashback had come to an end, so I quickly ran to the bathroom to vomit.
I was feeling better after upchucking, so I had realized that I had
good timing and had ran to the bathroom during a commercial. It was then
I noticed that the show had been running twice as long, it usually ran
for eleven minutes, but this episode was running for about thirty. By
then I was wondering if there was any information on "The Grieving" on
IMDB or something, so while the commercials were still playing I looked
up some information about this episode on Google. Nothing came up, no
information remotely similar to the plot or name of this episode existed
anywhere.
Now incredibly scared and wondering if anyone else was watching, I
quickly dialed my brother Larry and asked him to turn on Cartoon
Network and see if he was seeing the same shit that I was. He was pretty
mad that I woke him up at this hour, but he's a nice guy and told me he
would see for me. I thanked him and stayed on the line as the show came
back from commercial break. The scene had thankfully panned away from
the horrific sight of the children mutilated and was back to the
principal's office. I asked Larry if he saw some cartoon animals talking
or crying, since that was what they were doing on my TV. To my
surprise, he said that he saw nothing like that, instead it was a rerun
of an old Looney Tunes short. In utter shock, I dropped the phone and
ran over to the TV to turn it off and as hard as I pressed the buttons
it would not shut off at all, I tried every single button and none of
them did a thing. I tried unplugging the whole thing as well, but
nothing worked, the TV stayed on no matter what.
Larry had hung up, assuming that I was playing a joke or
something, I guess, and I was alone once again. My door was locked from
the outside somehow, and the door to my bathroom was now locked as well.
It seemed that I had no choice but to call the police, since my other
family members were gone that night, it was the reason I could stay up
so late to watch Adult Swim in the first place. When I hurriedly dialed
the number, I accidentally dropped my cell phone into my cup of Pepsi. I
was very scared, and had no choice but to finish the episode, I turned
on all the lights in my room and got under the covers, hiding like my
little brother does when I make him watch scary movies with me.
I had apparently missed a little bit, but Gumball's parents were
still talking to Principal Brown, so not that much. Nicole was asking
him if Gumball was alright, apparently since she hadn't remembered him
when Principal Brown told her what had happened to Darwin and Anais. He
looked slightly confused and shocked for a moment, and explained to her
that he thought Gumball was out sick today and he had spent the day at
home by himself with the stomach bug. Nicole screamed and wailed, while
Richard quietly told him, in a very out of character voice, that they
thought Gumball had got on the bus this morning, but it didn't seem that
way.
The police were called once again, to search the building and the
small forest outside of Elmore Junior High. They had found him in Miss
Simian's classroom, hanging by a noose, with a blood covered knife
behind him and blood covering his clothing. The episode ended with the
shot of Gumball's dead body hanging there in the corner fading to black.
The credits rolled silently, not like the usual way Cartoon Network
annoyingly airs a promo that squishes half the screen, these credits
rolled unusually slow and they weren't that fun to watch either, a
little creepy, just plain white text scrolling on a black background.
When I woke up, my door was unlocked, and my television was
turned off. I went to call the police on the home phone in my kitchen
and report that I had seen some very disturbing things on TV and that my
doors had been locked. When they arrived, they could find nothing like
what I remembered from early this morning. My internet history was even
cleared, they were angry at me, and just assumed that I had had a bad
nightmare, when I was sure I hadn't. Thankfully, one of the officers
felt bad for me and took me out to a small diner so I could recollect my
thoughts.
At the diner, I remembered that my family was out visiting my
aunt, and they were supposed to be back by noon or so. It was already
eleven, so the officer and I drove back only to find a whole squad of
police cars and even some government agents at my house. They explained
to me that my little brother was missing and that my mother and father
were major suspects. I was freaking out, and trying to tell them about
the disturbing clip of the boy who looked like my brother being shot in
the head, but they wouldn't listen. I stayed with my older brother,
Larry, who wouldn't believe me either, still insisting that all he saw
was an old Looney Tunes cartoon, and nothing at all creepy or weird. The
cops eventually told me that they would contact Turner Broadcasting and
tell them about the incident.
A representative of Turner Broadcasting came to my cousin's house
to talk to me in private about what I had seen and experienced that
night. He was very kind, but it all seemed a little like some sort of
front. After I could tell him all I remembered, he agreed to playback
that day's programming from when the incident with the disturbing
Gumball episode had occurred. To my shock, all that was airing at that
time was an old Looney Tunes short, nothing more, nothing less. I
hysterically sobbed and moaned that what I had experienced and seen was
completely real, but no one listened. Eventually, I discovered that Ben
Bocquelet had a Twitter account, so I sent a message about the episode
and this was the reply I got:
"One thing, how in the heck did you find that? I never, ever,
EVER, thought I would think about that old shame again. Don't tell
anyone this Sarah, (Yes, that's my name), but The Amazing World of
Gumball goes back further than you know. I used to have a really boring
job as a teen, and I sketched little drawings of The Wattersons and
friends. The episode you saw was never supposed to be seen by anyone but
me and a few friends of mine. It was a very, very awful thing to do,
but we made the episode as a joke. A guy from my old job, who everyone
hated, had lost a child to a crazed serial killer, who is apparently
still out there somewhere. Anyway, we made it so we could make fun of
how he came into work usually, crying like a fool, which is why you saw
Mr. and Mrs. Watterson cry so much in the episode. I know, I am deeply
sorry for what I did, which is why I tried to bury that stupid thing
years ago. Literally, I went out into the countryside with my mates and
dug a hole and buried it.
What I don't get though, is how you described the blood and guts
and stuff. We didn't have any scene with Darwin and Anais's bodies being
found, all that happens in the episode is the parents are informed of
the kids being found dead and them crying like crazy. We didn't even
draw anything in the episode like that, at all. We're not that sick.
Now, this is my theory, the lunatic who killed the man's child
found the tape we buried, watched it, and heavily edited it. Then, he
hijacked the local TV station near Vallejo somehow, and got
the episode to air on your local Cartoon Network station. Now, why your
brother couldn't see it, I have no idea, why it seems you're the only
one who saw it, I have no idea either. Sorry, but I just don't know.
Now, for the explanation you have been waiting for, the clips at
the end. I DON'T KNOW. I DON'T. I'm deeply sorry, from the bottom of my
heart, but I don't know why those clips were aired, I just don't. I am
sorry, I really am, but me and my mates are just the ones who made those
scenes with Richard and Nicole crying, that's it. I'm so sorry Sarah,
I'm so deeply sorry. -Best wishes, Ben Bocquelet and everyone involved
with, 'The Grieving'."
Because of my video downloaders being glitchy, I had to rip those cutscenes from the ROM.
However, I just got a single cutscene when I was done with the
rip: "suicideking_01.avi". It was a clip of 2 minutes and 58 seconds. It
was not even in its specific format; it came directly as an HD video,
somehow.
The cutscene began like in the intro for Faces of Evil, yet it
was mute. All what I could hear was an faint, eerie static noise in the
background. Link was stretching at the screen, saying nothing. The next
scene was different. When the King was drinking his wine, he did not
move. There was no background at all. Link zoomed into the screen,
immobile.
For a split of second, he had no face. I was getting really
scared, because nothing of that was part of the game. It cut back to the
King. This time, he was supposed to say his famous "mah boi" line, but
he looked different. His hair and beard was white, his pupils were red,
and his skin was pale. He was still mute. I felt like decades passed
through both scenes, like if he became older. The scene cut back to the
place where Link was supposed to be. He was not there.
Instead, a big stain of blood was on the bricks, and some windows
were broken. The scene went back to the King, who stared at the scene
for a few seconds, then went back to his wine, slowly. The camera
focused on Link again, but he was a lot more abnormal. He was almost
completely black, his smiling mouth had sharp, bleeding, shark-like
teeth. The background was black and red, and there was eerie music in
the background. The scene went black and mute for a second. Link's smile
was left behind, with a pair of red pupils staring at me. I was majorly
scared at that point.
The scene went black for a few seconds. Then, I saw the King's
chalice slowly falling down, with what sounded like the Song of Healing
playing backwards in the background. When it hit the middle of the
nothingness, it shattered. Shortly after, the King was falling to his
back, with eyes closed. I was sure. he was dead. Now the title made
sense. He committed suicide. How? The chalice maybe had poison in it?
Who knows. Without any noise, he hit the ground, immobile.
For a split of second, his colors were different. There was an
iron stack going through his chest, and the triangle of his forehead was
an inverted cross. I did not want to continue, but my curiosity grew
stronger, and forced me to keep watching. There was more darkness for a
few seconds. Then, a sword, pointing down, appeared silently. It blinked
in inverted colors for a few frames. Link's hand came down and pulled
up. His black silhouette appeared on a red background, after two seconds
of black screen. He said some sort of demonic whisper, but not during
all the scene. It went mute as he continued talking. When it went black
again, he said something distorted.
After I tried to hear it five times, it became clear.
"Kill anyone friendly."
I was really scared at that point. Then, Gwonam flew in like in
the first real scene, but he had that older style. There was no sound or
background. When his speech ended, Link's sword appeared, a demonic
whisper was slowly becoming louder. It cut to Gwonam again. Then, Link
holding the sword and pulling it up. And then, Gwonam again. When it
turned black, there were slaughter noises. Link's sword reappeared, but
it was covered with blood. It cut to Link's black silhouette, with a
different background this time.
There was more black screen. And then... Link's sword. He came in
again, and picked it up. But this time, he began to kill a lot of
people with the sword. I was unable to see their faces; I could just see
the sword swinging and the blood spilling. There were lots of screams
and massacre noises. Those screams were making me feel completely
scared. Link stabbed one person, who slowly raised his hand, then he
chopped it off. There was a chained man in the background, struggling to
escape while he watched Link kill two more people. He begged Link to
not kill him, but Link ignored his pleas and cut him in half. For a
split of second, a pair of horrendous eyes appeared on the screen. Then
there was more black screen. This time, it was longer.
Link slowly came toward the screen, faceless, with different
colors. As he approached, random images appearing for single frames,
eerie music was heard, with continuously increased volume. When he was
"looking" at me, he began to glitch. That was, until there was a deep
close-up at his empty face.
Before the video ended, the King appeared in a single frame, zombie-like.
After that, I got a blue screen.
Meg Griffin was happy, she had the most wonderful dream that the world
was peaceful and her family loved her. The dream was untrue, however.
Everybody hated her in reality. Her mother, Lois, forgot to make her
breakfast and when Meg complained, Lois told her to walk to school. Her
father, Peter, comes in and asks what is going on. Lois tells him that
Meg criticized her work.
Peter gets angry and hits a wall telling Meg to get out. Meg screams
and runs out. At school, Meg has no supplies she needs for class work,
as Peter forced her out before she could get any. She got in trouble in
her first 2 periods before going to lunch.
She sat at a table alone, as usual, and some popular kids teased
her for being forgetful, and hoped they "Won't forget Meg is a loser and
start hanging out with her." Meg begins crying and, while doing so,
somebody pushes her head into her mashed potatoes, breaking her glasses,
and having everybody laugh at her. Her clothes were dirty so she
received four lunch detentions in her next classes.
As the bell rings for the end of the school, Meg is trying to
erase her horrible day. However, on the way home, many people tease her
and nickname her "Potato-faced loser." Meg is now crying bitterly. She
runs home, and when she opens the door, nobody bothers to say "Hello" or
anything, for that matter.
Meg runs to her room. Meg usually cuts herself, so this was no
big deal. Everybody knew she did, even Stewie. But this time Meg was
going to extreme measures and was crying while doing so. She
accidentally slit her wrist too deep and screamed so loud that Glen
Quagmire, the neighbor, heard. However, even though all the family was
there, they didn't care.
"I hope she died." Brian remarks.
"Wait... that feels good." Meg says.
"YES! I LOVE THIS!" So Meg continues to brutally cut her pale skin.
She finally cuts off an entire finger, but instead of screaming
she laughs very, very maniacally. She cuts off all her fingers and
covers the blood with her pillows and sheets.
Her bedroom looked like a murder scene, it was so goddamn bloody.
Meg spots her flute, which she doesn't play very often because
everybody complains that it makes their ears bleed. She grabs her flute.
There is a blackout for about 10 seconds. Meg has a realistic-looking
knife in her hand. There is another blackout for about 20 seconds.
Meg has her flute in her mouth, now, which also looks strangely
realistic. Now there is a 30-second black out. Meg is stabbing herself
in the stomach, which is squirting out realistic blood; Meg's intestines
are coming out, too. Meg is in so much pain that she blows the highest
and most off key note on her flute. Now there is a minute of blackout,
before we see Meg lying in a dim forest, bleeding, with children
screaming in the background, and a hound barking.
Investigators found Meg's body in the forest and brought it to
the Griffins' house to ask what they request to do with the body. Peter
insists they bury it in the backyard, as they don't have enough money to
get it buried. There is a minute or two of blackout, before we see The
Griffins at the dinner table, eating realistic hands and legs, and Chris
putting salt on Meg's arm. They burp and leave the dinner table a
bloody mess
Until recently, it was thought that Matt Groening had completely
recovered from whatever was making him act so strangely during the Dead
Bart incident and that it had affected his normal life afterward. Recent
claims from the employee who found the Dead Bart video, however,
indicate that Matt Groening went through another, similar, incident ten
years ago. It was the summer of 1999 and Futurama had recently
premiered. Matt was working on two shows now and had started showing
signs of stress, when he announced that he was working on another
episode that would be 100% of his own writing. This terrified some of
the staff who worked on both shows, but they were hesitant to bring up
Dead Bart and the Futurama crew saw no reason to reject Matt's idea. An
early version of it was made and the employee who found Dead Bart
managed to make a digital copy of this as well. The episode was called
"Not Long Enough."
The episode started with Fry, Leela, and Bender making a delivery
for Planet Express. They never revealed exactly what they were
delivering or where they were going, and everyone seemed to be upset
about an unexplained event that had happened recently. Leela and Bender
were angry at Fry, who kept apologizing but was coldly rejected by his
friends. They eventually reached a planet that seemed to have only one
house surrounded by empty, desolate fields on all sides. They knocked
the door and a grotesque alien that seemed to be very old answered. He
took the box without a word. He opened it, took a knife out of it, and
stabbed himself.
The Planet Express crew didn't seem to find this odd or
surprising; they simply left the body on the ground and walked back to
their ship in silence. The next scene was of the Planet Express ship
flying through space. A dissonant piece of music made of extremely loud
instruments playing a very slow tune played in the background while the
ship flew through an empty, black space. They finally reached Earth and
landed in a deserted New New York. Fry started apologizing again as they
walked through the empty streets (there was no sign of the Planet
Express building), but Leela and Bender glared at him in silence. Fry
gave up and separated from his friends. He walked for quite a while,
never encountering a single person.
He reached the cryogenics building where he had been frozen,
looked inside, and began to cry. The crying went on for a few minutes
before he entered the building. Fry went to one of the tubes, set the
timer on it to a huge number with more zeroes than I could count, and
locked himself in. The screen faded out and when it came back in the
view was entirely on Fry. The machine must have partially stopped
working, as parts of Fry were decaying; bone was poking through his skin
in several places. Fry mumbled, "It's what I deserve," and climbed out
of the freezing device.
He was in a surreal, indescribable place. There were a huge
variety of shapes and colors, but it wasn't bright or fanciful. It was
closer to the faint colors you see if you close your eyes too hard. Fry
started walking, the surreal void he was in seeming to go on and on. He
kept walking for a few minutes. The colors kept making shapes you could
kind of make out, but none of them were pleasant. After his long walk,
Fry found a picture on the ground. It was completely out of place in his
new environment; it looked like something drawn in the normal Futurama
style. It was a photo of himself, Leela, and Bender. Fry looked at it
for a few seconds before beginning to cry again. The picture soon turn
to dust and Fry continued walking.
The view zoomed out until Fry couldn't be seen until the colors
all blended together and turned to solid black. The view continued to
zoom out and we see that the black was a tiny fragment of the pupil in
Fry's eye. His frozen body had fallen out of the freezing unit and was
lying in an abandoned room. He was drawn in the same hyper-realistic
style as Bart's corpse (from the Simpsons episode, "Dead Bart").
Bender and Leela walked into the room. They saw what Fry had done
to himself and Leela said, "He got what he deserved." She checked her
watch and said, "Looks like we need to leave for our next delivery." She
took a knife out of her pocket, put it in a plain cardboard box, and
headed to the ship.
You know how Fox has a weird way of counting Simpsons episodes?
They refuse to count a couple of them, making the amount of episodes inconsistent.
The reason for this is a lost episode from season 1.
Finding details about this missing episode is difficult, no one who
was working on the show at the time likes to talk about it. From what
has been pieced together, the lost episode was written entirely by Matt
Groening. During production of the first season, Matt started to act
strangely. He was very quiet, seemed nervous and morbid. Mentioning this
to anyone who was present results in them getting very angry, and
forbidding you to ever mention it to Matt.
I first heard of it at an event where David Silverman was
speaking. Someone in the crowd asked about the episode, and Silverman
simply left the stage, ending the presentation hours early. The
episode's production number was 7G06, the title was Dead Bart. The
episode labeled 7G06, Moaning Lisa, was made later and given Dead Bart's
production code to hide the latter's existence.
In addition to getting angry, asking anyone who was on the show
about this will cause them to do everything they can to stop you from
directly communicating with Matt Groening. At a fan event, I managed to
follow him after he spoke to the crowd, and eventually had a chance to
talk to him alone as he was leaving the building. He didn't seem upset
that I had followed him, probably expected a typical encounter with an
obsessive fan. When I mentioned the lost episode though, all color
drained from his face and he started trembling. When I asked him if he
could tell me any details, he sounded like he was on the verge of tears.
He grabbed a piece of paper, wrote something on it, and handed it to
me. He begged me never to mention the episode again.
The piece of paper had a website address on it, I would rather
not say what it was, for reasons you'll see in a second. I entered the
address into my browser, and I came to a site that was completely black,
except for a line of yellow text, a download link. I clicked on it, and
a file started downloading. Once the file was downloaded, my computer
went crazy, it was the worst virus I had ever seen. System restore
didn't work, the entire computer had to be rebooted. Before doing this
though, I copied the file onto a CD. I tried to open it on my now empty
computer, and as I suspected, there was an episode of The Simpsons on
it.
The episode started off like any other episode, but had very poor
quality animation. If you've seen the original animation for Some
Enchanted Evening, it was similar, but less stable. The first act was
fairly normal, but the way the characters acted was a little off. Homer
seemed angrier, Marge seemed depressed, Lisa seemed anxious, Bart seemed
to have genuine anger and hatred for his parents.
The episode was about the Simpsons going on a plane trip, near
the end of the first act, the plane was taking off. Bart was fooling
around, as you'd expect. However, as the plane was about 50 feet off the
ground, Bart broke a window on the plane and was sucked out.
At the beginning of the series, Matt had an idea that the
animated style of the Simpsons' world represented life, and that death
turned things more realistic. This was used in this episode. The picture
of Bart's corpse was barely recognizable, they took full advantage of
it not having to move, and made an almost photo-realistic drawing of his
dead body.
Act one ended with the shot of Bart's corpse. When act two
started, Homer, Marge, and Lisa were sitting at their table, crying. The
crying went on and on, it got more pained, and sounded more realistic,
better acting than you would think possible. The animation started to
decay even more as they cried, and you could hear murmuring in the
background. The characters could barely be made out, they were
stretching and blurring, they looked like deformed shadows with random
bright colors thrown on them.
There were faces looking in through the window, flashing in and out so you were never sure what they looked like.
This crying went on for all of act two.
Act three opened with a title card saying one year had passed.
Homer, Marge, and Lisa were skeletally thin, and still sitting at the
table. There was no sign of Maggie or the pets.
They decided to visit Bart's grave. Springfield was completely
deserted, and as they walked to the cemetery the houses became more and
more decrepit. They all looked abandoned. When they got to the grave,
Bart's body was just lying in front of his tombstone, looking just like
it did at the end of act one.
The family started crying again. Eventually they stopped, and
just stared at Bart's body. The camera zoomed in on Homer's face.
According to summaries, Homer tells a joke at this part, but it isn't
audible in the version I saw, you can't tell what Homer is saying.
The view zoomed out as the episode came to a close. The
tombstones in the background had the names of every Simpsons guest star
on them. Some that no one had heard of in 1989, some that haven't been
on the show yet. All of them had death dates on them.
For guests who died since, like Michael Jackson and George
Harrison, the dates were when they would die. The credits were
completely silent, and seemed handwritten. The final image was the
Simpson family on their couch, like in the intros, but all drawn in
hyper realistic, lifeless style of Bart's corpse.
A thought occurred to me after seeing the episode for the first
time, you could try to use the tombstones to predict the death of living
Simpsons guest stars, but there's something odd about most of the ones
who haven't died yet.
I just want to start off by saying if you want an answer at the end, prepare to be disappointed. There just isn't one.
I was an intern at Nickelodeon Studios for a year in 2005 for my
degree in animation. It wasn't paid of course, most internships aren't,
but it did have some perks beyond education. To adults it might not seem
like a big one, but most kids at the time would go crazy over it.
Now, since I worked directly with the editors and animators, I
got to view the new episodes days before they aired. I'll get right to
it without giving too many unnecessary details. They had very recently
made the SpongeBob movie and the entire staff was somewhat sapped of
creativity so it took them longer to start up the season. But the delay
lasted longer for more upsetting reasons. There was a problem with the
series 4 premiere that set everyone and everything back for several
months.
Me and two other interns were in the editing room along with the
lead animators and sound editors for the final cut. We received the copy
that was supposed to be "Fear of a Krabby Patty" and gathered around
the screen to watch. Now, given that it isn't final yet animators often
put up a mock title card, sort of an inside joke for us, with phony,
often times lewd titles, such as "How sex doesn't work" instead of
"Rock-a-bye-Bivalve" when SpongeBob and Patrick adopt a sea scallop.
Nothing particularly funny but work related chuckles. So when we saw the
title card "Squidward's Suicide" we didn't think it more than a morbid
joke.
One of the interns did a small throat laugh at it. The
happy-go-lucky music plays as is normal. The story began with Squidward
practicing his clarinet, hitting a few sour notes like normal. We hear
SpongeBob laughing outside and Squidward stops, yelling at him to keep
it down as he has a concert that night and needs to practice. SpongeBob
says okay and goes to see Sandy with Patrick. The bubbles splash screen
comes up and we see the ending of Squidward's concert. This is when
things began to seem off.
While playing, a few frames repeat themselves, but the sound
doesn't (at this point sound is synced up with animation, so, yes,
that's not common) but when he stops playing, the sound finishes as if
the skip never happened. There is slight murmuring in the crowd before
they begin to boo him. Not normal cartoon booing that is common in the
show, but you could very clearly hear malice in it. Squidward's in full
frame and looks visibly afraid. The shot goes to the crowd, with
SpongeBob in center frame, and he too is booing, very much unlike him.
That isn't the oddest thing, though. What is odd is everyone had hyper
realistic eyes. Very detailed. Clearly not shots of real people's eyes,
but something a bit more real than CGI. The pupils were red. Some of us
looked at each other, obviously confused, but since we weren't the
writers, we didn't question its appeal to children yet.
The shot goes to Squidward sitting on the edge of his bed,
looking very forlorn. The view out of his porthole window is of a night
sky so it isn't very long after the concert. The unsettling part is at
this point there is no sound. Literally no sound. Not even the feedback
from the speakers in the room. It's as if the speakers were turned off,
though their status showed them working perfectly. He just sat there,
blinking, in this silence for about 30 seconds, then he started to sob
softly. He put his hands (tentacles) over his eyes and cried quietly for
a full minute more, all the while a sound in the background very slowly
growing from nothing to barely audible. It sounded like a slight breeze
through a forest.
The screen slowly begins to zoom in on his face. By slow I mean
it's only noticeable if you look at shots 10 seconds apart side by side.
His sobbing gets louder, more full of hurt and anger. The screen then
twitches a bit, as if it twists in on itself, for a split second then
back to normal. The wind-through-the-trees sound gets slowly louder and
more severe, as if a storm is brewing somewhere. The eerie part is this
sound, and Squidward's sobbing, sounded real, as if the sound wasn't
coming from the speakers but as if the speakers were holes the sound was
coming through from the other side. As good as sound as the studio
likes to have, they don't purchase the equipment to be that good to
produce sound of that quality.
Below the sound of the wind and sobbing, very faint, something
sounded like laughing. It came at odd intervals and never lasted more
than a second so you had a hard time pinning it (we watched this show
twice, so pardon me if things sound too specific but I've had time to
think about them). After 30 seconds of this, the screen blurred and
twitched violently and something flashed over the screen, as if a single
frame was replaced.
The lead animation editor paused and rewound frame by frame. What
we saw was horrible. It was a still photo of a dead child. He couldn't
have been more than 6. The face was mangled and bloodied, one eye
dangling over his upturned face, popped. He was naked down to his
underwear, his stomach crudely cut open and his entrails laying beside
him. He was laying on some pavement that was probably a road.
The most upsetting part was that there was a shadow of the
photographer. There was no crime tape, no evidence tags or markers, and
the angle was completely off for a shot designed to be evidence. It
would seem the photographer was the person responsible for the child's
death. We were of course mortified, but pressed on, hoping that it was
just a sick joke.
The screen flipped back to Squidward, still sobbing, louder than
before, and half body in frame. There was now what appeard to be blood
running down his face from his eyes. The blood was also done in a hyper
realistic style, looking as if you touched it you'd get blood on your
fingers. The wind sounded now as if it were that of a gale blowing
through the forest; there were even snapping sounds of branches. The
laughing, a deep baritone, lasting at longer intervals and coming more
frequently. After about 20 seconds, the screen again twisted and showed a
single frame photo.
The editor was reluctant to go back, we all were, but he knew he
had to. This time the photo was that of what appeared to be a little
girl, no older than the first child. She was laying on her stomach, her
barrettes in a pool of blood next to her. Her left eye was too popped
out and popped, naked except for underpants. Her entrails were piled on
top of her above another crude cut along her back. Again the body was on
the street and the photographer's shadow was visible, very similar in
size and shape to the first. I had to choke back vomit and one intern,
the only female in the room, ran out. The show resumed.
About 5 seconds after this second photo played, Squidward went
silent, as did all sound, like it was when this scene started. He put
his tentacles down and his eyes were now done in hyper realism like the
others were in the beginning of this episode. They were bleeding,
bloodshot, and pulsating. He just stared at the screen, as if watching
the viewer. After about 10 seconds, he started sobbing, this time not
covering his eyes. The sound was piercing and loud, and most fear
inducing of all is his sobbing was mixed with screams.
Tears and blood were dripping down his face at a heavy rate. The
wind sound came back, and so did the deep voiced laughing, and this time
the still photo lasted for a good 5 frames.
The animator was able to stop it on the 4th and backed up. This
time the photo was of a boy, about the same age, but this time the scene
was different. The entrails were just being pulled out from a stomach
wound by a large hand, the right eye popped and dangling, blood
trickling down it. The animator proceeded. It was hard to believe, but
the next one was different but we couldn't tell what. He went on to the
next, same thing. He want back to the first and played them quicker and I
lost it. I vomited on the floor, the animating and sound editors
gasping at the screen. The 5 frames were not as if they were 5 different
photos, they were played out as if they were frames from a video. We
saw the hand slowly lift out the guts, we saw the kid's eyes focus on
it, we even saw two frames of the kid beginning to blink.
The lead sound editor told us to stop, he had to call in the creator
to see this. Mr. Hillenburg arrived within about 15 minutes. He was
confused as to why he was called down there, so the editor just
continued the episode. Once the few frames were shown, all screaming,
all sound again stopped. Squidward was just staring at the viewer, full
frame of the face, for about 3 seconds. The shot quickly panned out and
that deep voice said "DO IT" and we see in Squidward's hands a shotgun.
He immediately puts the gun in his mouth and pulls the trigger.
Realistic blood and brain matter splatters the wall behind him, and his
bed, and he flies back with the force. The last 5 seconds of this
episode show his body on the bed, on his side, one eye dangling on
what's left of his head above the floor, staring blankly at it. Then the
episode ends.
Mr. Hillenburg is obviously angry at this. He demanded to know
what the heck was going on. Most people left the room at this point, so
it was just a handful of us to watch it again. Viewing the episode twice
only served to imprint the entirety of it in my mind and cause me
horrible nightmares. I'm sorry I stayed.
The only theory we could think of was the file was edited by
someone in the chain from the drawing studio to here. The CTO was called
in to analyze when it happened. The analysis of the file did show it
was edited over by new material. However, the timestamp of it was a mere
24 seconds before we began viewing it. All equipment involved was
examined for foreign software and hardware as well as glitches, as if
the time stamp may have glitched and showed the wrong time, but
everything checked out fine. We don't know what happened and to this day
nobody does.
There was an investigation due to the nature of the photos, but
nothing came of it. No child seen was identified and no clues were
gathered from the data involved nor physical clues in the photos. I
never believed in unexplainable phenomena before, but now that I have
something happen and can't prove anything about it beyond anecdotal
evidence, I think twice about things.