Tuesday, October 31, 2017

A Look at "Channel Zero: Candle Cove", pt5

Last Entry…
            That is to say this is the last one talking about “Candle Cove”.  I have talked about Creepypasta, the show as an idea, the first three episodes, the last three episodes, and even my praise and criticism of that program, today I will talk about one last thing on this subject.
            I will provide an answer to the question, “Well, if you’re so smart, what would you do?”

What I Would Have Done
            I say all this as a guy who generally does not like giving negative reviews, as I find products like "Candle Cove" to be so disappointing for their failed potential.
            Just from that starting point of strangers doing casual research on a TV show from them as a kid you could go in a hundred directions, and “Channel Zero” chose one of them, and then put in WAY TOO MUCH EXTRA STUFF.
            Let me just throw out some basic ideas, adhering as close as I can to the initial premise of the Creepypasta that started it, and then weaving it out from there to incorporate other Creepypastas, and even other aspects of internet’s toxic and insane “culture”.
 
Yeah, I am using this image again, because it looks great...
And this is foreshadowing.
Let’s Begin
            Have someone, let’s call him Jason watching a show with their kid and begins to reminisce about shows he watched as a child, mention several real and fictional shows without missing a beat (this will actually be foreshadowing).
            Jason starts to remember another show he saw as a child.  Having it right on the tip of their mind he decides to research it by creating an account on a TV show forum and posting what he recalls.  This is where you start introducing the other characters, who read the question and start recalling their time watching as kids.
            After they start posting about it the show starts to haunt them.  They look thru old school binders for crayon drawings to jog their memories.  Then they start to have haunting things happening, walking into their house and the TV is on but showing blackness and the sound of a static hiss.  They start having dreams about being kids and the puppets talk to them like they are a character in the show.  One of them has a relative that is suffering from dementia who starts to sing songs from the show.  One of them gets lost while going home and when they find their place someone else is living there.  These events start to pile.
            The group starts looking into it all more and more.  Finding old forums and youtube videos that mention TV shows like “Candle Cove” and others talking about songs from the show, but nothing solid.  (Speaking as someone who has killed hours looking up old cartoon theme songs on youtube, this sort of behavior can be really engrossing).
            They start chasing down old VHS recordings of the show to no avail.  They look for toys or puppets on Ebay.  Communicating with each other more and more, becoming friends as each of them become more and more consumed with the idea of finding this old show.

The Middle
            While their research is going on subtler things have to start showing up to indicate the haunting(?) of them by the show.  People with out of date cloths, old cars, old turn dial phones, and other indicators of being out of time start to show up.  TV’s stop looking like the big black flat rectangles, and more and more tube TV’s start showing up.  Fewer mp3 players, more CD’s and tape decks.  Everything starts to look cruddier.

I feel less at home around this junk.
            After a time one of the members of the online group stops posting on anything and the others lose contact with them.  The group makes a decision to end the long-distance nature of their friendship and, “go on an adventure”.  They all decide to meet in person and find their missing member.  Ideally, the missing member would be Jason, the person who the audience started the show with.  Emphasizing how unmoored the narrative’s reality has become.
            As the number of strange instances in their lives grows, with waking dreams, erratic moods, seeing images of static on TV’s and computer monitors (something modern monitors don’t do), the group start to doubt their own perceptions and begin to question why they are dropping everything to leave and go look for someone they have never met.  As one of the secondary characters leaves their apartment with a bag, they turn to go back home and drop the whole thing, but Janet’s place is now gone entirely, replaced with an office building.  No turning back now.
            It all seems absurd, crossing the country to help someone they only know online because they became friends recalling a TV show no one else in the world seems to remember.  When they all arrive in Jason’s town things seem askew.  The town has old architecture and a small-town feel, but Janet and the other heroes all feel a sense of familiarity to it.
            They investigate and find a woman in a local old folks’ home that is Jason’s mom, when they go to talk to her she claims she has no son.  They keep telling her that Jason is her child and is missing, but she denies it.  They blame dementia, but they suspect something else is at work.
            Janet calls their mom and asks about the show being told that she would watch a static screen as a child and then talk about a show that she made up.  Instead of an imaginary friend, she had an imaginary show.  Another member, Billy goes to call their parent but their mom doesn’t know who they are and tells them not to call back, they try their other parent to the same result, they try to call a sibling and can’t find them (this sibling should be established as younger and close to the character, not recalling the show because they had just been a baby).
            The characters have now been isolated from a world that the increasingly do not recognize.

Last Third
            The characters start to come to a realization that since they came to Jason’s town they haven’t gotten a call, text, or any internet communication from anyone but other members of the group.  When Janet tries to show the group that she contacted her mom by calling her back, Janet’s phone just tells her that the number doesn’t connect to anything.
            As they start to pool their knowledge of the show, that the puppets went on an adventure in a cave and came into contact with something called “Skin Taker” they notice that there are no lights outside the room they are in.  The room hangs in darkness, and the TV comes on and starts playing the show with their missing member appearing as a puppeteer and he begins to tell them what is wrong.
            Here is my ultimate twist.  I ultimately want the story to be about the Mandela Effect.  The characters are unstuck from their universe.  They would have just lived in the new universe, but by peeling at the broken memory of their childhood they opened a temporal scab.  They are now drifting, lost in time and space.  The TV clicks off and the room goes dark.
            A puppet show starts playing to the audience at home, with Janet as a puppeteer asking, “Where am I?”



Damn It!
            I swear to god, I wrote out that “What I would do”, hit save, and turned in my chair to see my brother stepping silently into my room.  I yelled, “Jesus Fucking Christ”.  I have not been startled that badly in years.  I stupidly primed myself to be creeped out and then BAM!  Completely innocuous thing hits at just the right time.
 
Asshole!


Anyway…
            The theme to my version is: Don’t dwell on inane shit from your childhood, it causes you to divorce from reality.  I draw on elements that only exist in the original story and extrapolate from them.  The INTERNET and communication thru it is a core plot element.  The idea of researching the show causing the problem is a core element.
            Sure, I cut in the Mandela Effect something that was not explicitly referenced in the original story.  BUT, one of the most cited instances of the Mandela Effect is childhood TV shows, things that no one else remembers.  This addition is a natural extension of the material into another internet cultural element.
            Maybe I should not be writing fan fiction about Creepypasta, but then again, “Channel Zero” does.  And with far less respect for their source material.



            I will also freely admit to drawing inspiration from the novel “Ubik”, by Phillip K Dick.  In the novel, a group of psychics are unstuck from time after surviving a bombing.  The world around them starts to devolve back thru time and some of them wither to mummies.  The idea of branching timelines is a big part of the narrative, that and making fun of consumer culture and AI, but I will leave that for another fan fiction.

In Conclusion
            I was frustrated by this show.  But having written this blathering down and distributing it to the world I feel a little better.  No longer carrying around ideas that I haven’t bothered to write down.  Hopefully, I made some sense and was mildly entertaining.
            Happy Halloween.

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            If you like or hate this please take the time to comment, +1, share on Twitter (click that link to follow me), Tumblr, or Facebook, and otherwise distribute my opinion to the world.  I would appreciate it.

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