What is Creepypasta
The term
Creepypasta is a quasi-pun on the term “Copy Paste a” as in you are copying and
pasting a story you read somewhere to a new forum for people to read. The idea being that the original source is
lost, much like a rumor, gossip, or in the case of “Creepy” a campfire ghost
story.
It is an
online community that was based around the format of presenting stories in such
a way that they look real. Photoshopped
pictures, drawings, formatting the text to look like a web board conversation,
and other little tricks to make them appear as authentic.
Authenticity inevitably dies by the sword of meme culture though. |
The creepy
factor has more to do with playing with people’s expectations of the
mundane. You see and read information
off of a chat window every day, so reading someone else’s chat going back and
forth about something creepy, like finding a dead body, or hearing something
outside, that can be cool.
The problem
is… WAY TOO MANY of these things are god awful to read, and I can tell you why,
but first let me state something about criticism in this instance.
Criticism
All of this
hacky, poorly structured, poorly edited schlock is just a creative writing
exercise. People will never get better
at writing unless they have the space to practice and the support of a
community that will read their stuff and give them criticism. The idea that your stuff is being read and enjoyed
by someone motivates you to write more, and getting sound advice and biting
criticism can push someone to become better.
I cannot recommend Gladwell's books enough. I have read "Tipping Point", "Blink", and "Outliers" (Where this quote is from). They have a lot to say about critical thinking and wider social trends. |
Writers get
better with practice and an idea made of the misassembled ideas stolen from
other works can mutate into something of value and substance. As derivative as this all can be, something
can come out of it.
If you
don't like reading amateur work, that is fine, but you should not be down on it
as a whole. These communities act as creative outlets for people who might not
otherwise have access to the teachers or support groups necessary to cultivate
their aspirations as writers. These
communities serve a function, and it is a function that should be respected,
lauded even, for what it can do to help people become better. Only 1/10,000 people has any knack for
writing, and lot of what they write will be bad too. But without the other 9,999 people around to
read their stuff and give them support, it will all go to waste.
If you want
to read these things, try to encourage people to not only write something out,
but to edit their work for typos, edit their work for word use, and to edit for
punchy and functional length. Don't just tell them that they never got past 8th
grade, because the reason their writing didn't get past 8th grade English
probably has something to do with a lack of support to begin with. Or they are literally in the 8th
grade and starting out early to develop their writing. I wish I had an online means of getting my
stuff read back in 1998, I would have gotten a lot more down and reviewed.
Be a critic.
Be better than the guy who insults
amateurs for trying. Even if you are a better
writer, even if you are a really good writer, don't be the guy who derides
other's attempts when they are starting out just trying to tell scary stories
to their friends. Help them, don’t
dissuade them.
Famous Creepy Pasta
There are
really no bones about this one.
Slender Man, star of video games, internet memes, and the inspiration for
one real life attempted murder of a child by other children has to be number 1
with a knife.
I am
confident most people have heard of this character, and there is more lore
surrounding him than I am interested in learning, but what is sort of fun, he
might be a work of quasi-plagiarism.
Here is a video from the youtubers, RedLetterMedia to explain how they
kind of invented a character like Slender Man.
What is
important to note here, aside from the fact that creepy people in suits talking
to children is instant horror, is that this idea permutated in an interesting
way.
Suits are
dehumanizing status symbols that imply an uncaring but wealthy/powerful person
with control over your life. The less
personality or distinctiveness to the suit the more alienating it is.
I am sure
in Ancient Rome there was a boogeyman figure that wore a toga. And I am sure there have been similar
non-person manifestations of the supernatural thru all cultures. Wearing something nice, and otherwise having
no identity.
See, even
if the guy got an idea from watching some shit movie in the Midwest, it doesn’t
really matter because the ideas are so derivative and hack that they could have
come from anywhere. Slender Man is a
mashup of elements that has inspired a lot of online… let’s call it
“literature” and has grown beyond the original idea, which had grown beyond the
work of RedLetterMedia, and wherever the germ of that idea came from they grew
it from beyond that.
Idea Growth and Development
Stories are
in some ways, living things. They grow
and change passing from mind to mind, changing the environment of those minds
based on how much of an impact they carry and passing onto new minds via being
memorable and catchy. Like a pop song or
a virus.
The reason I
wanted to talk about Creepy Pasta has to do with a show I watched last year and
whose sequel series is being called, “The
best horror show you’re not watching”.
The show is “Channel Zero” which might be the best title for a horror
anthology show since “The Twilight Zone”.
The reason,
I suspect, that no one is watching season 2, has to do with the steady decline
of season 1 to a truly unsatisfying ending.
It left a bad taste in my mouth that I have wanted to talk about for
ages, but because I had so much to say I just couldn’t sit down and get it out.
If I were a
youtuber I would go thru “Channel Zero” episode by episode pulling it
apart. Here, on blogger, I am just going
to put down enough of my ideas to feel like I am done thinking about it. To get it out of the cycle of my
thoughts. Because, and this is no joke,
for the last year I have thought about that show periodically and it has
bothered me how disappointed I was with it.
See, the
“Criticisms” section above, that applies to the amateurs that put their work
out on a website for fun and some attention.
That does not apply to a professionally produced TV show on Sy-Fy made
by people who are supposed to know where to make cuts and where to put things
in. I wanna lay into them a bit, but not
too much because the show had a lot of positive elements that I feel could have
been great if not for the key failures.
Here is Part 1 of my look at "Candle Cove".
Here is Part 1 of my look at "Candle Cove".
The monstrous figure here... That is an element that should have been given a miss. |
A Parting Criticism
This is
Jenny Nicholson, a delightful woman who primarily makes fun of “Star Wars” and
is a combination of low key strangeness and cuteness. She is an interesting youtube persona. This video is her explaining a SUPER LEGIT
criticism for Creepy Pasta that I think many writers of the stuff might want to
take to heart.
The issue
being how the genre(?) has moved away from plausible to just an arms race of
gore. Lots of purple prose discussing
guts. Guys, I respect your efforts, but
you are not Clive Barker. Try to
describe something mundane like a flower or a bookshelf before trying to
describe viscera.
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