Idk spit balls dont do much damage I would imagine and the test being ripped up means he basically failed his entire year why are you complaining about the teacher he's just shocked this guy would do that.
Most accurate part is that the school looks exactly the same as it did in 1981, so the bully didn't even realize initially he was transported to the future.
@@1370802 So basically architecture is making no progress, at least when it comes to schools? I've seen newer schools and older schools in my country and the difference is massive.
There's a movie called Senior Year, 90s popular cheerleader girl gets into coma and wakes up in the 2020s, then gets back to highschool. Not the best movie out there but the plot is similar 😄
This continues until one of the elderly staff members sees him and recognizes him as the kid that went missing over 4 decades ago and reveals to him that he’s in the future by showing him the old photos and the news about his disappearance. This sends him to a complete shock as he travels to find his friends and family who have either all passed away, or grown up and moved on with their lives. Maybe he finds his younger infant sibling who is in their 40’s and has kids of their own. They lament that they never got to know each other since he was gone before they could grow up. This changes his entire outlook on life and the rest of the movie is dedicated to him trying to find a way to go back and live it more fully.
I also find that, at least in my highschool, owning up to being a nerd/dork is respected. Thinking you're cool, and trying to act cool when you're not is usually how people got bullied back in my high school XD
@@amog8202That's true both ways. Explosiveness of tantrums, less draconian parents, and, uh... the "American school classic" gives them the fear, while modern mental health analysis suggests early intervention and support is critical. Teachers gotta be mini-psychiatrists with bad pay, it's unreal.
“I told a kid I was gonna give him a swirly and he told me his dad doesn’t lock his gun locker at night. I was like what does your dad being lazy have to do with anything? Nerds are so weird these days “
@@nlpntYep, there is a fad now where people take 80's and 90's subculture clothing/haircuts and use it as fashion. Not all of them are back but some are. Even subgenres of Rock and Metal are getting more popular than they were 10 years ago.
Oh my god bro why do you care? It’s just a comment! Are you that insecure of being a nobody? Like, are you the most neglected child in your family or something? Also, did you even watch this dude’s video of him making fun of the fact that people like you thanking for likes for a comment that took like what? 15 seconds to make?
Ngl 80s and 90s bullies and stories from my family was the EXACT reason I worked out like crazy before going to high school...only to be met with the fact that wow people are massively less of a jerk in high school than middle school and what stories I was hearing didn't end up happening to me in high school. Thank god but also wow I was screaming like I was being stabbed while pulling weights for nothing like damn I thought I was gonna fight because I dropped someone's pencil while it rolled to the left side of their desk instead of the right side of their desk.
@AvaAdore-wx5gg I'm not sure. For me, it was mostly that I notice in my middle school everyone...REALLY wanted to be grown ups and not kids, that and the fact they were really into like spending a ton of money and looking rich while also following what some rappers were doing like gang stuff...I can kinda see why they were jerks. For me, I did have it easier because, to quote my crush in high school, I "look like a bully" so most people only really verbally attacked me (I did say stuff back so it kinda just lead to arguing so I just rolled my eyes and moved on) and that might be why HS was easier for me than my friends since most people...were scared of me until I spoke or they say me playing Sonic in class lmao
@@AvaAdore-wx5gg i am saying this, for i believed you were talking about recent shows that use these type of uh... whatever is the theme originally spoken in shows placed around the 21st Century.
I grew up in the 80s and 90s, I never met a school bully that asked for lunch money. That's a stereotype and I wonder if it even happened in the 1950s.
Yeah, I just got called gay/gaywad a lot, but the bully that did that to me the most is now locked up for the sale and distribution of heroine/fentanyl, so I'm the last one laughing. Also, for clarity sake, I'm not gay but I was a nerd/kinda weird so I struggled to make friends, so I was an easy target for abuse of every kind. He had fun shoving my head in the snow, I didn't have fun trying to shove him off me while a bunch of kids surrounded us screaming "Fight!" repeatedly, and I was super confused (at the time) when the adult watching over us rolled her eyes and told me I fought back when I ran up to her while escaping the bully after shoving him off of me. As if it wasn't obvious I wanted nothing to do with that idiocy. It's called defending yourself, something you need to do when someone is trying to make you suffocate on snow and no one else is making them stop.
Sure, 1980s movie bullies were push-overs. ...where I'm from, an early 80s bully would stab you in the school hallway. Because the bully kid was in a gang selling drugs like PCP and he didn't GAF. Yeah, go get a gun over it. Kid still didn't GAF, his gang had guns too and they didn't have metal detectors until like 87 in the schools. His .38 was in his waistband already. It was business as usual, not "I'm a bored white kid who didn't get hugged enough".
@@hypermangi8265 the funny thing is in movies and TV it was always played off as a joke, or harmless prank, when it is in fact a pretty serious assault. Though where I went to school the nerds were more likely to be "trashed" IE grabbed by shirt collar and belt, flipped upside down and stuffed into a trash can than receive a swirlie.
@@maxmccullough8548 That’s still horrible, but significantly more humane than what has already been mentioned. I’m glad the worst I ever saw in school was some idiots fighting in the commons. I just turned the other way and let the adults handle it (we had supervisors to break that kind of thing up).
What would be great is the bully’s particular go-to tease is calling people gay slurs but only does so bc he’s in the closet. And since nowadays, people are more accepting, he learns to come to terms with his sexuality.
As a kid of the 80's and early 90's I can attest that some kids really did act this way sometimes back then. However I could never tell if the movies were reflecting the kids in real life or if the kids in real life were imitating the movies. Probably a little of both.
@@vilagistene2939 authority was respected in the 80s, largely because authority figures actually had power behind them. If you assaulted or even as much as backtalked a teacher or principal, you'd not only get expelled but your parents would beat the sh*t out of you and no one would care. CPS? Cops? They side with the teachers and parents.
Pretty good...though "my bad" didn't really start as a hyper-mainstream popular phrase until about 1996. It should technically be noted that Louis Armstrong said "my bad" in the late 1950s as a translation of the Italian "mia culpa", and it has attested use among some wider select groups of primarily black people going back to the 1970s...but a white kid in the 1980s is pretty unlikely to use that phrase.
I heard Arsenio Hall say "my bad" in 1989 on his late night talk show, which was widely popular, so the phrase got mainstream exposure years before 1996. Where are you getting the year 1996 from anyway?
@@John-ct9zs Clueless, the movie, came out in mid 1995 and became a pop-cultural touchstone. They use it all the time in that movie, and a lot of people who saw the movie started saying it. By 1996, even isolated white people who had never seen the movie were saying it. Arsenio Hall was mainstream, but he was a TV guy...movies regularly redefine pop-culture as a whole.
And this is why I kind of liked the new take on Flash the Bully in the tom holland spiderman movies. The stereotypical bully shoving people into lockers just doesn't happen anymore
Just wish he was more of an actual character rather than a gag. makes me concerned for how theyre gonna handle the black suit, especially after all of the supporting cast were essentially removed and have to be reimplemented from the ground up
@MahNamJeff I'll be honest, I'm not sure where they're going with the Tom holland spiderman. I was one of the 5 people who didn't like no way home- it was full of inconsistencies and terrible writing, it's like they threw all the character development from the first two movies out the window. I'll be surprised if they even get to certain comic book storylines like black suit spider man before marvel collapses on itself.
@@bookworm598 With what i expect (a straight adaptation) they have until secret wars to do it. but after the mcu's recent outing bombed so hard that theyve said they gotta rethink everything, its hard to see if it's actually gonna continue.
That fake test was so perfect. The way you have to treat so many standardized tests basically focuses on you learning an entirely new dialect and choosing not the answer that makes most sense to you, but the answer the test would like from the biases you have to teach yourself to find.
@@Undertale-ly1tw Tbh from my school experience bullies hang out in groups (Comprising of bullies and people who hang out with bullies to be safe and popular). So you wouldn't be jumping him, you would be jumping them. And jumping them is a lot harder than jumping him.
This one minute and 16 seconds video literally inspired me to make a story about two 16-year-old boys a Nerd and a Bully going to the year 2023 and meeting their 26-year-old counterparts and are trying to find their way to get back home haven’t come up with a title yet but it’s coming together. So if that story does pan out And I put it on RUclips or something I’m definitely giving you credit for inspiration king.
@@rmb6037 Yeah don’t know where the idea came from but I personally think it came somewhere from my Love of Time Travel and Pass meets Future stories lol
@@3MissElusive3 no, what they mean is why would the characters' counterparts be only 26 if their younger selves came from the 1980s? they'd be 56 instead.
@@phantommah8042 What would the bully do when they are AI deepfaked in a video of them doing the deed with another man? Kids today have the power to be RUTHLESS.
I mean if the guy actually had given the 2023 kid a swirly or shoved him in a locker i feel like this would be a very different sketch. Namely because im pretty sure the admins would call the cops on him
Not really they can’t. A school can’t call the police for children because that would be scandal. Maybe he would got suspension, but a school can’t call the police for kids.
The teacher having the reaction about the test being used as spitballs is relatable. When I was in elementary school, my teacher walked over to one of the boys' desks and she saw how he used up all of his sticky notes to create one of those stop motion things of a ball bouncing from wall to wall, you know? She said how he basically wasted all the sticky notes when he could have used them for actually writing down notes.
Inhumane control in the name of safety and inclusion. Leave the kids alone, let life happen with its certainties, uncertainties, mistakes, learning from mistakes and overcoming difficulties or bad experiences (backbone). That resembles living more than existing.
idk how to say this but this guy’s shouting sounds really good. this is some shouting i would listen to in a HD movie and think ‘this sound quality is so good ’
As a gal who got bullied for 9 years, I can confirm bullies are not like this, even the “modern” kind. They mostly do mental and psychological damage. Guys always were the ones targeting me for no reason, I was only minding my own business yk! But I’ve had physical ones happen to me too, so it’s nothing I personally think is funny to joke about. Though, this made me chuckle because of how stereotypical this “bully” trope was 😂
Dude, I remember standing up against a guy that dare bully guys 2 years older than him. He stole one of my drawings for english class. I was about 8 or so as well. Teachers never really cared, dad was on jail and mom was always on drugs. But, I really never knew that information but years later after leaving that school.
I love the idea of a bully from the 80s interacting with modern day nerds, because it doesn't matter how stronger the bully, these days people just know that a kick in the balls will always work. In the modern era there's no such thing as cheating, cuz no ones plays fair
Fr. Bullying is still a problem, but schools are a lot stricter on kids than they used to be, and most kids would think that the bully is trolling for threatening to steal their lunch money or shove them in a locker. Teachers and staff members would have him humbled real quick, and students wouldn't take the bully seriously and would probably beat him up for being "cringe". If the bully does something that would actually piss people off, all the bully has to do is say a slur that wouldn't have gotten them in trouble back in the day, and a big chunk of the school would team up and jump the guy and dox him.
So here’s what I’m wondering: If the nerd was so smart that he freaking invented a hand held Time Machine, why did he end up becoming some teacher who has to relive his trauma every day in the same school where he was bullied? Why did he not continue using his potential to create even more tech gadgets that would make him a billionaire today? What if… …the nerd was forever blamed for his bullies disappearance. Think about it. The bully was last seen with the nerd. The nerd was constantly being tormented by the bully, and now suddenly the bully is missing. He becomes suspect number one. He either is convicted, but only serves a minor sentence as they never find the body or any hard evidence to convict him of actual murder. Or simply gets off Scott free, with the community constantly suspecting him of being responsible for the bully’s disappearance. As a result, hes either traumatized because of the additional social rejection caused by not only the blame for the murder, and everyone disbelieving he created a functioning Time Machine, or the actual guilt of being responsible, and never knowing whether or not the bully lived or evaporated, or due to his criminal background never becomes a college graduate. Basically BECAUSE the bully disappeared into the unknown, the nerd can never become successful in life beyond a meager wage as a school teacher.
If I met a 1980's bully and started asking for lunch money and said if I didn't give it to him, he would either give me a swirly, A wedgie or shove me in a locker, then I would laugh and say this is 2023, Not the 1980's, 1990's ,2000's or 2010's anymore. Today we have Mobile Lunch money and bullying is now roasts, not punches.
@@Realuser0000 I believe you. As someone who was raised in the 2000s, when I hear about how brutal a lot of teens were in the 80s, I think to myself, "Yeah, that kinda explains why most of the kids I knew who were my age thought that having your parents beat the crap out of you was normal." It's interesting seeing how each generation came to be and seeing how their younger selves acted and how they carried their bad habits into adulthood. This is probably because, from what I've heard, parents and schools alike were far too relaxed when it came to setting boundaries for their kids in the 70s and 80s. They weren't looked after and had way too much freedom, so their behavior was rarely corrected and they got away with too much without learning a lesson, because those adults weren't around (from what I've heard) to discipline them or correct said behavior. Then they grew up and let all their loved ones suffer, and at that point, as adults, it was too late for them to change. Parents and schools are stricter with kids now, and they humble kids, probably undoing the mistakes of their more permissive parents' generation. They pay more attention to kids, actually discipline kids, and set more rules. We still have a lot of badly behaved kids, but even the worst ones are tolerable compared to the spoiled and borderline sociopathic teens I hear about in some of these awful stories from victims of that time period. Teachers today complain about kids getting our of their seats or using their phones in class, while the teachers from my dad's high school in the 80s had to deal with spoiled teenage boys getting black pepper in the air vents and shooting sling shots at adults and other students.
@@Realuser0000seems like you speaking from experience huh buddy? Anyways, 80s bullies were like 5’5, and just spoiled, pathetic brats. Nowadays most middle schoolers are taller than them, and trust me, getting a broken nose is literally nothing compared to other types of injuries
@@CrizzyEyes It depends on the school, the neighborhood, the demographics and the general culture. In some inner-city public schools, neither the teachers, the students or the parents generally don't care about failing grades, and most of the kids go on to work blue-collar jobs regardless, or worse.
I was homeschooled. So I don't really know how school bullying works first hand. But I am pretty sure that getting your head shoved in a toilet or getting shoved in a locker would still suck, even in 2023.
Nobody actually pays attention to this, but bullies assaulting other kids for money is a crime. Outside school its called "stealing". I wonder if someone has ever been arrested for this at school.
I don’t get it, is the nerd buying a home or is the nerd now an adult and is buying a house, or is this a joke on how housing is expensive now. I’m confused.
@@guilhermeteodosio40 oh so it’s a joke on expensive housing? Ok I didn’t get it it looked like the nerd just decided to buy a house out of no where and it surprised the bully.
@@krystiankowalski7335 Exactly, no idea why they'd think that. More punishment doesn't mean better behaved kids. There's a variety of factors, discipline can be effective or ineffective depending on the person and situation. Although I'd say it should be obvious to someone with empathy that we need to avoid harming children when possible, which is pretty much all the time.....
Using Chatgpt to make a full length movie In the quaint town of Fairview, Johnny Thompson reigned supreme as the classic 80s bully. His mullet and denim jacket were badges of honor, and he ruled the hallways of Fairview High with a swagger that struck fear into the hearts of his classmates. One ordinary day after football practice, Johnny, surrounded by his gang of loyal followers, spotted a nerdy kid named Chris engrossed in some sort of device. "Go away, nerd," Johnny sneered, shoving Chris aside. "What's this? One of your little loser devices you made because you're a loser, stupid nerd?" The device made a loud noise and temporarily blinded Johnny. "Where'd he go? Why, I oughta-" "Whatever. It's time for lunch," Johnny declared, brushing off the encounter. Later, during lunch, Johnny spotted another target, a kid he thought looked like an easy mark. "Hey, kid, yeah, you. What, you gotta need lunch money I could borrow?" Johnny sneered. "What, dude? No one carries around physical money for lunch. Are you broke or something?" the modern-day kid replied, looking unimpressed. "You little punk, quit messing with me before you get yourself a swirly." "A swirly?! Bro this isn't a 1980s teen Netflix original," the kid retorted, rolling his eyes. Confused and frustrated, Johnny's attempts to assert dominance continued to backfire. As the day progressed, he found himself in a classroom, trying to intimidate students during a test. "Yo, what's up, Grant?" one student greeted another. "Yo, Tyler, who was that kid?" "I don't know, some NPC." "Netflix? Probably some nerd crap. And remember to add your units; you won't get full credit unless you-" "Sorry, I'm late, teach." "You're a whole five minutes late, and this is the biggest test of the year! "Oh, my bad." As Johnny's attempts to navigate the modern world continued to fail, he stumbled upon a group of students making paper spit balls during a lecture. "Everyone, look at this! Actually trying to get school-did you rip out your whole test to make spit balls?" "You failed. Get out of my class!" Frustrated and increasingly out of place, Johnny's once-mighty reputation began to crumble. Even the classic bullying tactic of shoving someone into a locker was met with confusion. "Come on, guys, let's get out of here." "Guys, there's not a single person behind you, and why do you walk like that?" "Hey, kid, do my homework for me, or I'll shove you into a locker." As Johnny wandered through the corridors of Fairview High, baffled by the strange devices and unfamiliar faces, an elderly staff member named Mrs. Johnson caught sight of him. Her eyes widened with recognition as she stared at the man who seemed frozen in time. "Johnny? Johnny Thompson?" she gasped, her voice trembling with disbelief. Johnny, still reeling from the shock of the modern world, looked at her with confusion. "Uh, yeah, that's me. Who are you?" Mrs. Johnson led Johnny to a dusty storage room filled with old yearbooks and newspapers. She pulled out an ancient yearbook, flipping through its yellowed pages until she found the photo of a young, mullet-sporting Johnny. "You disappeared over four decades ago. You're the kid who went missing!" Mrs. Johnson exclaimed, pointing to the black-and-white photo. As Johnny stared at the image of his younger self, the reality of his situation hit him like a ton of bricks. Mrs. Johnson then showed him newspaper clippings reporting his mysterious disappearance and the emotional turmoil it caused in the community. "I'm in the future?" Johnny mumbled, his eyes wide with disbelief. Mrs. Johnson nodded solemnly. "Yes, Johnny. You've been missing for over 40 years. Everyone thought you were gone forever." A whirlwind of emotions engulfed Johnny as he absorbed the news. With a heavy heart, he left the confines of Fairview High to explore the world beyond, hoping to find remnants of the life he once knew. His journey led him to the graveyard, where he discovered the tombstones of his friends and family. Tears welled up in his eyes as he realized the irreversible passage of time. His parents, his once-annoying younger sibling, and even his childhood friends had all moved on or passed away. Determined to connect with his past, Johnny set out to find his younger sibling, who was now in their 40s with children of their own. When he finally tracked them down, there was a bittersweet reunion. They lamented the fact that they never got to know each other, that Johnny had disappeared before they could grow up together. This revelation shook Johnny to his core. With newfound purpose, he decided to make the most of the time he had left in this strange future. He worked tirelessly to understand the technology, culture, and values of the present, bridging the gap between the past and the present. The rest of the story unfolded as Johnny, armed with a fresh perspective on life, embarked on a quest to find a way to return to his own time. Along the way, he formed unlikely friendships, learned valuable life lessons, and discovered the power of second chances. As the movie reached its climax, Johnny faced a choice - to stay in the future and embrace the opportunities it offered or to return to his own time with a newfound appreciation for the people he had lost. The story became a poignant exploration of the impact of time, regret, and the importance of cherishing every moment.
Accurate how the teachers cares more about the test being ripped apart than the student getting spitballs shot at him
Society
I used to have a saying in school: Most teachers would walk past a fight just to tell someone to spit out some gum.
Idk spit balls dont do much damage I would imagine and the test being ripped up means he basically failed his entire year why are you complaining about the teacher he's just shocked this guy would do that.
@@urphakeandgey6308 Or tell them that they need to stop exposing their shoulder
That’s so true
Most accurate part is that the school looks exactly the same as it did in 1981, so the bully didn't even realize initially he was transported to the future.
lol
No shit. They never renovate schools in America
Yeah, that's right, hahaha
I think buildings staying the same is normal….. my current apartment is literally from that same year.
@@1370802 So basically architecture is making no progress, at least when it comes to schools? I've seen newer schools and older schools in my country and the difference is massive.
ain't no locker in my school big enough to fit an entire person lmao
Not with that attitude
I'd say ain't no locker in my school period. Am I too European to understand what a locker is?
You got lockers?
I'm in texas and we have no lockers either.
I mean that makes getting shoved into one a *much* more serious threat now doesn't it
I'd honestly watch a comedy show based on this plot.
There's a movie called Senior Year, 90s popular cheerleader girl gets into coma and wakes up in the 2020s, then gets back to highschool. Not the best movie out there but the plot is similar 😄
There's the movie 21 jump street too which is pretty similar
That's literally Johnny Laurence from Cobra Kai.
I would too. Or a movie.
@@duru4998 Oh yeah, that's true
"who's that kid?"
"idk some npc"
omg this phrase is brilliant
💀
The fact he teleported here MAKES him an NPC.
Don't only "NPCs" call others NPCs? Now at least, it seems like any overused term, often used by the very types who would fit the definition.
@@SéaFid One could get to that conclusion, yes
yeah, most guys calling someone NPC, sigma or other stuff are fckn losers rn, cuz of how much it's overused @@SéaFid
Plot twist: the teacher was the nerd he was bullying in 1981’s and now the nerd is a teacher
real 1x1x1x1 😱😱😱
Revenge of the Nerds
that sucks for the nerd
No imagine the teacher was the bully once he grew up
The bully got held back 40 times
This continues until one of the elderly staff members sees him and recognizes him as the kid that went missing over 4 decades ago and reveals to him that he’s in the future by showing him the old photos and the news about his disappearance. This sends him to a complete shock as he travels to find his friends and family who have either all passed away, or grown up and moved on with their lives. Maybe he finds his younger infant sibling who is in their 40’s and has kids of their own. They lament that they never got to know each other since he was gone before they could grow up. This changes his entire outlook on life and the rest of the movie is dedicated to him trying to find a way to go back and live it more fully.
Holy shit you should direct a movie bro
Ooo that’s be sick
Now that, sounds like something I would watch.
He has to find that one nerd who created the original device
That's actually pretty similar to Flight of the Navigator. Lol
"I don't know some NPC" 💀
nerds and npc’s
NPC's in youtube : ""(Cited quote from the video)" 💀"
@@elgeorge45000 It's getting old tbh
its almost like that same exact quote was in the video
LOL
Lol nowadays we take the terms “dork” and “nerd” as terms of endearment.
Dork, nerd, geek, dweeb, and derivatives thereof. They're charming and rustic now.
I mean... it depends on the type of nerd, dunnit?
I also find that, at least in my highschool, owning up to being a nerd/dork is respected. Thinking you're cool, and trying to act cool when you're not is usually how people got bullied back in my high school XD
I smell... Bri'ish @@ARCtheCartoonMaster
@@shadowpower1856 you know now that i think about it all the bullys were vary nice to me and i was a "nerd"
Even funnier, some of the teachers would be more concerned about him than the students
About time they finally cared more
@@sploofmcsterra4786 as in scared
@@amog8202That's true both ways. Explosiveness of tantrums, less draconian parents, and, uh... the "American school classic" gives them the fear, while modern mental health analysis suggests early intervention and support is critical. Teachers gotta be mini-psychiatrists with bad pay, it's unreal.
“I told a kid I was gonna give him a swirly and he told me his dad doesn’t lock his gun locker at night. I was like what does your dad being lazy have to do with anything? Nerds are so weird these days “
This made me wheeze. I feel like he'd also be like "bro we get you hunt, you think you're so special for having a rifle in your car?"
"He mumbled something about some eric bozo IDK probably one of his loser videogames right guys haha"
ur so cringe bro
En LATAM te agarran a navajazos
@@idkbro191 You're more cringe for saying that
I love Grant’s videos so much, I love how it’s just constant screaming and chaos 😂
laughing
“loud = funny” when done right, can be hysterical, and when done wrong… we have Wubbzy
@@DaveRequiemalso lankybox
@@troyboyplays oh yeah them too
frfrfrf
Your videos are so funny and enjoyable. I'll never get bored of it. But can you do a 2023 kid in the 1980s?
The 2023 kid will be running the school
Imagine some kid running around in an 80s high school screeching "skibidi toilet ahh sigma rizz in ohio"
@emeraldbacon7630 I dunno about you, but they'd be experiencing over 40 roid raged athletes. I don't think they'd be running at all
@@zombiekiwiIMMA FINNA GET OUT
Good idea
He seems abnormally calm considering he basically time traveled 40 years into the future
He's an 80's bully; he's clearly not smart enough to realize that.
@@kohaiame2691 A lot of clothes and hair styles have come back around.
@@nlpntYep, there is a fad now where people take 80's and 90's subculture clothing/haircuts and use it as fashion. Not all of them are back but some are. Even subgenres of Rock and Metal are getting more popular than they were 10 years ago.
@@nlpntSame also goes for techno subgenres. Particularly ones like coldwave, witch house, ambient, atmospheric and alike.
He's a teenager he doesn't care yet
Swirly/Weggie/ stuffed into a locker
The 80s: *a death threat*
Now: *a joke* Edit: why does this have 2.5k likes? (my 2nd most popular comment)
@@Realuser0000 Yeah, discipline was basically non-existent in schools compared to now. That's why bullies are more chill today.
@@mynameisreallycool1 people are chill nowdays because they don't wanna get shot
laptops mean nobody really uses lockers anymore
Now everyone hides behind screens to sent death threats to people
@@mynameisreallycool1Bullying is in online now which is non effective to be fair
The “BWAHAHAHA!” Laughing was hilarious
(Mother, I believe I am famous 🧐)
"A SWIRLIE? BWHAHAHAHAHAHA!"
“SHOVED INTO A LOCKER?
BWAHAHAHAHA-“
"Mother, I believe I am famous" 🧐 💅 💅
Oh my god bro why do you care? It’s just a comment! Are you that insecure of being a nobody? Like, are you the most neglected child in your family or something?
Also, did you even watch this dude’s video of him making fun of the fact that people like you thanking for likes for a comment that took like what? 15 seconds to make?
Ngl 80s and 90s bullies and stories from my family was the EXACT reason I worked out like crazy before going to high school...only to be met with the fact that wow people are massively less of a jerk in high school than middle school and what stories I was hearing didn't end up happening to me in high school. Thank god but also wow I was screaming like I was being stabbed while pulling weights for nothing like damn I thought I was gonna fight because I dropped someone's pencil while it rolled to the left side of their desk instead of the right side of their desk.
💀
@@hypermangi8265 me tbh
For nothing? Self-improvement is never pointless.
@@CrizzyEyes Oh fair, it did help me out in other ways just I thought I was gonna get bullied and have to fight
@AvaAdore-wx5gg I'm not sure.
For me, it was mostly that I notice in my middle school everyone...REALLY wanted to be grown ups and not kids, that and the fact they were really into like spending a ton of money and looking rich while also following what some rappers were doing like gang stuff...I can kinda see why they were jerks.
For me, I did have it easier because, to quote my crush in high school, I "look like a bully" so most people only really verbally attacked me (I did say stuff back so it kinda just lead to arguing so I just rolled my eyes and moved on) and that might be why HS was easier for me than my friends since most people...were scared of me until I spoke or they say me playing Sonic in class lmao
“Alex was born on Monday. How much money does he have now?”
Bro what?
If he was born in the U.S. probably like -$10,000 already
It’s a test on zodiac signs, it’s not rocket science
@@emeraldfinder5who cares about zodiac signs 😂😂
@@fernandorochamedeiros5684 The test does
@@fernandorochamedeiros5684alot of people, actually
I love how despite these things being associated with the 80's, they still appeared in stories that are much more recent
even when you think this isnt real anymore lol!
Usually it's because the writers grew up in the 80's
@@AvaAdore-wx5ggwell, Stranger Things is placed on the 80's, i heard.
@@AvaAdore-wx5gg i am saying this, for i believed you were talking about recent shows that use these type of uh... whatever is the theme originally spoken in shows placed around the 21st Century.
*cough* Dhar Mann *cough*
All fun and games until the 1980s bully makes fun of the 2020s quiet kid.
It would turn into Columbine real quick!
Are you fluffy
Pumped Up Kids Intensified
I was one of those 2020s quiet kids.
ohohohoo DARK JOKE
1:14 his laugh sounds like woody I’m dying 😭😭😭
TRUE
LOOK BUZZ AN ALIEN
@@-brackets- WHERE?!
I grew up in the 80s and 90s, I never met a school bully that asked for lunch money. That's a stereotype and I wonder if it even happened in the 1950s.
to be fair, in the 90s we had moved on to the lunch voucher system, so if anything he'd be telling you to run them pockets for a coupon.
Yeah, I just got called gay/gaywad a lot, but the bully that did that to me the most is now locked up for the sale and distribution of heroine/fentanyl, so I'm the last one laughing.
Also, for clarity sake, I'm not gay but I was a nerd/kinda weird so I struggled to make friends, so I was an easy target for abuse of every kind. He had fun shoving my head in the snow, I didn't have fun trying to shove him off me while a bunch of kids surrounded us screaming "Fight!" repeatedly, and I was super confused (at the time) when the adult watching over us rolled her eyes and told me I fought back when I ran up to her while escaping the bully after shoving him off of me.
As if it wasn't obvious I wanted nothing to do with that idiocy. It's called defending yourself, something you need to do when someone is trying to make you suffocate on snow and no one else is making them stop.
My dad grew up in the 70's and said other than the exaggerations, the essence of it is pretty accurate in how they're portrayed.
Sure, 1980s movie bullies were push-overs. ...where I'm from, an early 80s bully would stab you in the school hallway. Because the bully kid was in a gang selling drugs like PCP and he didn't GAF. Yeah, go get a gun over it. Kid still didn't GAF, his gang had guns too and they didn't have metal detectors until like 87 in the schools. His .38 was in his waistband already. It was business as usual, not "I'm a bored white kid who didn't get hugged enough".
@@Bundor8D congratulations. I commented about the silly stereotype that's being assumed. You're commenting to be the coolest kind in chat.
Ain't no way some Nickelodeon ahh school bully bout to start waffling about giving me a "swirly" 💀
Bullies are utter jokes of human beings
@@yellowpower3755 💯
not the "swirly" bro 💀💀💀
Bruh this child is really using all the cringe gen alpha internet skibidi toilet slang words "ahh" "waffling" "💀" get off the ipad bro
@yungmuney5903 your generation invented ebonics mf WTF 😂
That laugh at 1:15 Is hilarious as f*ck
Swearrr
Got me chuckle but not that funny
😂😂😂
Woody from Toy Story
Remembers of Woody's laugh
"Who's that kid?"
"Oh, some NPC."
I just made a connection I’ve never though about before: “Swirly” is just a modified water boarding. That’s actually kinda horrific.
Worse because they usually tried to find the filthyuest school toilet.
@@maxmccullough8548 That’s horrible. The evil that had to possess people to do that to someone else…
oh so that's what that is, sum American stuff indeed that one would find in movies n such.
@@hypermangi8265 the funny thing is in movies and TV it was always played off as a joke, or harmless prank, when it is in fact a pretty serious assault. Though where I went to school the nerds were more likely to be "trashed" IE grabbed by shirt collar and belt, flipped upside down and stuffed into a trash can than receive a swirlie.
@@maxmccullough8548 That’s still horrible, but significantly more humane than what has already been mentioned. I’m glad the worst I ever saw in school was some idiots fighting in the commons. I just turned the other way and let the adults handle it (we had supervisors to break that kind of thing up).
1:10 nahh, that dude pulled the GTA VC walk animation
Technically if he's from the 1980's he did the walk before even gta 1 was a concept
@@Hellodude-el1sp he's just ahead of his time, i guess
Literally my first thought
Gta vc was based off 1980s Miami tho
Fr
This would make a great TV show plot
A 1980s bully time travels to 21st century
Omygosh yes
What would be great is the bully’s particular go-to tease is calling people gay slurs but only does so bc he’s in the closet. And since nowadays, people are more accepting, he learns to come to terms with his sexuality.
@@itrashcant7947Typical 21st century plot line, trying to make everything gay.
@@bjrock1235 The next 21st century plot line is making YOU gay.
@@itrashcant7947 I already am lol I’m bi
0:16 "Why I oughta!"
Whatever It's time for lunch...
HEY KID YEAH YOU
@@FrenchGuyXDyeah what?
@@stephengaming554 ya got any lunch money I can borrow
@@FrenchGuyXDLunch money? Dude no one carries around physical money for lunch are you broke?
Bully: give me your lunch money!
Me: you guys are getting lunch money?
As a kid of the 80's and early 90's I can attest that some kids really did act this way sometimes back then. However I could never tell if the movies were reflecting the kids in real life or if the kids in real life were imitating the movies. Probably a little of both.
probably both?
1:13 the offscreen laughter is the best part
That shit is just disrespectful 😂. The other kid totally laughed at the threat.
Love the energy you put into these videos.
Bullying in 2023: “and tell your mom to wear more red on onlyfans, I like that”
this was wild
It’s not bullyng it’s free speech.
@@vilagistene2939Free speech protects you from merely the government. You don’t know what free speech is.
Counter taunt: "I will. The allowance I get from your dad is much larger than yours."
Please. The 80s bully would have the time of life here. Cause he'd know if he bullied any of the other kids, the teachers would punish them.
So what you're saying is,
The school stayed the same
@@davey5703 yes
Why in the 80s they didn’t? Weren’t teachers stricter then?
@@vilagistene2939 authority was respected in the 80s, largely because authority figures actually had power behind them. If you assaulted or even as much as backtalked a teacher or principal, you'd not only get expelled but your parents would beat the sh*t out of you and no one would care. CPS? Cops? They side with the teachers and parents.
That's because the kids punish each other with guns
When the bully gets bullied but he has no idea
Pretty good...though "my bad" didn't really start as a hyper-mainstream popular phrase until about 1996. It should technically be noted that Louis Armstrong said "my bad" in the late 1950s as a translation of the Italian "mia culpa", and it has attested use among some wider select groups of primarily black people going back to the 1970s...but a white kid in the 1980s is pretty unlikely to use that phrase.
So _that_ was when white people appropriated apology culture...
Nerd!
Nerd!
I heard Arsenio Hall say "my bad" in 1989 on his late night talk show, which was widely popular, so the phrase got mainstream exposure years before 1996. Where are you getting the year 1996 from anyway?
@@John-ct9zs Clueless, the movie, came out in mid 1995 and became a pop-cultural touchstone. They use it all the time in that movie, and a lot of people who saw the movie started saying it. By 1996, even isolated white people who had never seen the movie were saying it. Arsenio Hall was mainstream, but he was a TV guy...movies regularly redefine pop-culture as a whole.
Back then more of it was physical, now its more psychological.
And this is why I kind of liked the new take on Flash the Bully in the tom holland spiderman movies. The stereotypical bully shoving people into lockers just doesn't happen anymore
Yeah but he still sucked in the movie.
Just wish he was more of an actual character rather than a gag.
makes me concerned for how theyre gonna handle the black suit, especially after all of the supporting cast were essentially removed and have to be reimplemented from the ground up
@MahNamJeff I'll be honest, I'm not sure where they're going with the Tom holland spiderman. I was one of the 5 people who didn't like no way home- it was full of inconsistencies and terrible writing, it's like they threw all the character development from the first two movies out the window.
I'll be surprised if they even get to certain comic book storylines like black suit spider man before marvel collapses on itself.
u should help them bro I believe u have the skills for it with the know-how you got@@bookworm598
@@bookworm598 With what i expect (a straight adaptation) they have until secret wars to do it.
but after the mcu's recent outing bombed so hard that theyve said they gotta rethink everything, its hard to see if it's actually gonna continue.
That fake test was so perfect. The way you have to treat so many standardized tests basically focuses on you learning an entirely new dialect and choosing not the answer that makes most sense to you, but the answer the test would like from the biases you have to teach yourself to find.
wat
@@roadkill_52 bro think he oppenheimer
What the FUCK are you yapping about 😂
"bro got outdated💀" "frrrr💀💀"
That teacher is getting major flashbacks
fr 🗿
1980s bully: *Bullies 2020s quiet kids*
The entire school: This shit gon get ugly...
Quietude does not signify danger, you meme-producing entities.
@@gabsartits a joke
Transported through time... still shows up for his exam. He's a good egg.
An 80s and a 90s bully would beat the shit out of you if you talk back only 1 time because they're more physical than todays bullies. And I'm serious.
Bro, 2023 has jail for kids lol
watch him get jumped the EXACT same day.
@@caritalocadasit's called juvie, bro.
@@Undertale-ly1tw Tbh from my school experience bullies hang out in groups (Comprising of bullies and people who hang out with bullies to be safe and popular). So you wouldn't be jumping him, you would be jumping them. And jumping them is a lot harder than jumping him.
@@AWD-qi9bl there not gonna be in a group fore
ver
Honestly I'd watch a whole series of this
So would I.
They should make a movie
I'm pretty sure these bullies died the moment Columbine type stuff happened.
They graduated or dropped out
Correct. The bullies before Columbine were ruthless
@@greywakeznot as ruthless as a gun
@@greywakez Aw man, i really wanna experience a wedgie 😔
You mean that massive psyop involving the trenchcoat agents?
How does bro not lose his voice yelling this much 😭💀
This one minute and 16 seconds video literally inspired me to make a story about two 16-year-old boys a Nerd and a Bully going to the year 2023 and meeting their 26-year-old counterparts and are trying to find their way to get back home haven’t come up with a title yet but it’s coming together.
So if that story does pan out And I put it on RUclips or something I’m definitely giving you credit for inspiration king.
26 year old counterparts? Huh?
@@rmb6037 Yeah don’t know where the idea came from but I personally think it came somewhere from my Love of Time Travel and Pass meets Future stories lol
@@3MissElusive3 no, what they mean is why would the characters' counterparts be only 26 if their younger selves came from the 1980s? they'd be 56 instead.
"Who was that kid?"
"I don't know, some npc"
BRO. 80s bullies would get absolutely TRASHED by just the regular ol' kids of today
You have this backwards. Even the dorks in these 1990 high school videos look more threatening than a bully of today
is it trashing if they don't register that and aren't affected by it?
@@phantommah8042 exactly. the real threats are the quiet ones.
Kids today would cry at the first real slur thrown at them lol
@@phantommah8042 What would the bully do when they are AI deepfaked in a video of them doing the deed with another man? Kids today have the power to be RUTHLESS.
I mean if the guy actually had given the 2023 kid a swirly or shoved him in a locker i feel like this would be a very different sketch. Namely because im pretty sure the admins would call the cops on him
Not really they can’t. A school can’t call the police for children because that would be scandal. Maybe he would got suspension, but a school can’t call the police for kids.
@@vilagistene2939Reddit university be like
@@kirbya9545 ??
The teacher having the reaction about the test being used as spitballs is relatable. When I was in elementary school, my teacher walked over to one of the boys' desks and she saw how he used up all of his sticky notes to create one of those stop motion things of a ball bouncing from wall to wall, you know? She said how he basically wasted all the sticky notes when he could have used them for actually writing down notes.
1980s bullies: I THINK THE LITTLE WANTS TO GIVE FREDBEAR A BIG KISS
they said bullying not homocide
@@Alright281 its actually more like manslaughter. you see they wanted to torment evan, not kill him
@@Alright281 I think you didn't get the reference
@@IamaSlytheringirl They did get the reference, if they didn’t, they wouldn’t include the word “homicide”
@@guidinglight6485 alr
"SHOVE ME INTO A LOCKER? BAHAHA-"
Now kids who defend themselves from physical bullying are punished as well what a world we live in 😂
Inhumane control in the name of safety and inclusion. Leave the kids alone, let life happen with its certainties, uncertainties, mistakes, learning from mistakes and overcoming difficulties or bad experiences (backbone). That resembles living more than existing.
i love the fact that everybody's just yelling at him even louder and he just doesn't care and get very confused instead
i accidentally locked myself in a locker once
How is that even possible 💀
@@jackofjack i closed the locker door from the inside
Self bullying
Are you out yet?
"LUNCH MONEY? PWAHAHAHAHAH" the way he laughs bro.
0:41 bruh has no idea
idk how to say this but this guy’s shouting sounds really good. this is some shouting i would listen to in a HD movie and think ‘this sound quality is so good ’
It’s not a Netflix documentary, but a RUclips documentary
As a gal who got bullied for 9 years, I can confirm bullies are not like this, even the “modern” kind.
They mostly do mental and psychological damage. Guys always were the ones targeting me for no reason, I was only minding my own business yk! But I’ve had physical ones happen to me too, so it’s nothing I personally think is funny to joke about.
Though, this made me chuckle because of how stereotypical this “bully” trope was 😂
Dude, I remember standing up against a guy that dare bully guys 2 years older than him. He stole one of my drawings for english class. I was about 8 or so as well.
Teachers never really cared, dad was on jail and mom was always on drugs. But, I really never knew that information but years later after leaving that school.
Oh quiet, softie
Now this gets me thinking what if a stereotypical bully met an actual bully.
@@1950s_was_da_peak nope,edgelord
How are you now?we're may be strangers but i hope you healing despite this terrible sh!t happened to you💫💫💫
I love the idea of a bully from the 80s interacting with modern day nerds, because it doesn't matter how stronger the bully, these days people just know that a kick in the balls will always work. In the modern era there's no such thing as cheating, cuz no ones plays fair
Are you actually that naive? Good luck with that lmao
@@aneasteregg8171 Oh, the bully from the 80s got access to the internet. So, do you know what a copypasta is?
@@tpfoxCastro wat
There’s also the case of the bullied kid bringing a fcking gun too…
@digitalcringepolice No no no, I wasn't alive in the 80s. My among us account is there to prove that I was born in 2021
yeah a 80's bully wouldnt survive the modern schools, everything is changed man
Fr. Bullying is still a problem, but schools are a lot stricter on kids than they used to be, and most kids would think that the bully is trolling for threatening to steal their lunch money or shove them in a locker. Teachers and staff members would have him humbled real quick, and students wouldn't take the bully seriously and would probably beat him up for being "cringe". If the bully does something that would actually piss people off, all the bully has to do is say a slur that wouldn't have gotten them in trouble back in the day, and a big chunk of the school would team up and jump the guy and dox him.
They ain't got shit on the quiet kids
80's quiet kids are the real ones to be scared of@@TheMenaceHimself2006
@@TheMenaceHimself2006 The 80's bully when the quiet kid pulls up with an AR-15:
@@mynameisreallycool1I'm sure they'd do just fine. Like they give a shit about being doxed.
Bro said why I outta💀
hope everyone doing good and staying safe. If you need to talk to someone or need help, there are people who care. Sending support and hearts. ❤❤❤❤❤
You to 😀❤️
thanks for the hearts G rehehehheheheheh
Wholesome. I appreciate it.
TSMT! (This, so much this!)
I genuinely lose my shit at every upload your humour is right up my alley keep it up man its great!
I don’t think kids in the 80s say “Bro” 0:04
Pretty sure people been saying bro since like the 60s dude. It’s not new slang 🤣
@@monkbeats290yeah fr
@@monkbeats290Of course the roblox kid wouldn’t know 😂
Bro really thinks the word bro was invented in the last ten years or something 💀💀💀💀💀
@@Matt77889 lol
"My school doesn't even have a locker wdym shoving me in 😂"
So here’s what I’m wondering: If the nerd was so smart that he freaking invented a hand held Time Machine, why did he end up becoming some teacher who has to relive his trauma every day in the same school where he was bullied? Why did he not continue using his potential to create even more tech gadgets that would make him a billionaire today?
What if… …the nerd was forever blamed for his bullies disappearance. Think about it. The bully was last seen with the nerd. The nerd was constantly being tormented by the bully, and now suddenly the bully is missing. He becomes suspect number one. He either is convicted, but only serves a minor sentence as they never find the body or any hard evidence to convict him of actual murder. Or simply gets off Scott free, with the community constantly suspecting him of being responsible for the bully’s disappearance.
As a result, hes either traumatized because of the additional social rejection caused by not only the blame for the murder, and everyone disbelieving he created a functioning Time Machine, or the actual guilt of being responsible, and never knowing whether or not the bully lived or evaporated, or due to his criminal background never becomes a college graduate. Basically BECAUSE the bully disappeared into the unknown, the nerd can never become successful in life beyond a meager wage as a school teacher.
50s bully would sent switchblade threats.
Really?
@@bjrock1235 yes. he'd start out with the "meh, see?" then pull out a switchblade, then the cops would come.
year 640 ad bullies
Bruh shove me into a locker most lockers in my city have been taken out of schools entirely 😭
The comedy and the acting is great! It's just a minute long but feels like so much happened! And great use of the FMA: B music!
oh is that what the background music is from? it felt so familiar but i couldn't remember why
80s bullies always be sayin “My Bad” 😂
Bro refused to accept reality
If I met a 1980's bully and started asking for lunch money and said if I didn't give it to him, he would either give me a swirly, A wedgie or shove me in a locker, then I would laugh and say this is 2023, Not the 1980's, 1990's ,2000's or 2010's anymore. Today we have Mobile Lunch money and bullying is now roasts, not punches.
It's both roast and punch
no but the soviet Union survived that decade until the end of it
@@Realuser0000then say that they were the one who tried to flirt with you to get the school against them
@@Realuser0000 I believe you. As someone who was raised in the 2000s, when I hear about how brutal a lot of teens were in the 80s, I think to myself, "Yeah, that kinda explains why most of the kids I knew who were my age thought that having your parents beat the crap out of you was normal." It's interesting seeing how each generation came to be and seeing how their younger selves acted and how they carried their bad habits into adulthood.
This is probably because, from what I've heard, parents and schools alike were far too relaxed when it came to setting boundaries for their kids in the 70s and 80s. They weren't looked after and had way too much freedom, so their behavior was rarely corrected and they got away with too much without learning a lesson, because those adults weren't around (from what I've heard) to discipline them or correct said behavior. Then they grew up and let all their loved ones suffer, and at that point, as adults, it was too late for them to change. Parents and schools are stricter with kids now, and they humble kids, probably undoing the mistakes of their more permissive parents' generation. They pay more attention to kids, actually discipline kids, and set more rules. We still have a lot of badly behaved kids, but even the worst ones are tolerable compared to the spoiled and borderline sociopathic teens I hear about in some of these awful stories from victims of that time period. Teachers today complain about kids getting our of their seats or using their phones in class, while the teachers from my dad's high school in the 80s had to deal with spoiled teenage boys getting black pepper in the air vents and shooting sling shots at adults and other students.
@@Realuser0000seems like you speaking from experience huh buddy? Anyways, 80s bullies were like 5’5, and just spoiled, pathetic brats. Nowadays most middle schoolers are taller than them, and trust me, getting a broken nose is literally nothing compared to other types of injuries
0:28 I- i do....
Freak
Y u mean to me :(
@@takenshota546 because that's mad weird tf?
@@takenshota546 you also have shota in ur name...pfile
aww i’m sorry
The most inaccurate part is how the teacher actually gives a shit about him failing.
Actually teachers do care
Its based on your experience of course
@@dude9318 They wouldn't care about some retard ripping up his test.
They care because it means less funding for their school. The solutions to this problem are usually awful, though.
damn what are you? Boyinaband?
@@CrizzyEyes It depends on the school, the neighborhood, the demographics and the general culture. In some inner-city public schools, neither the teachers, the students or the parents generally don't care about failing grades, and most of the kids go on to work blue-collar jobs regardless, or worse.
Also I realized that the present teacher was the 1981 nerd😂
Bully: Give me your lunch money or you’re getting a swirly!
80s/90s: *trembles in fear*
2020s: Who’s that kid? I don’t know some NPC?”
I love a dude from the 1980s who says "my bad" lol
"Jokes on you I'm into that shit!"
I was homeschooled. So I don't really know how school bullying works first hand. But I am pretty sure that getting your head shoved in a toilet or getting shoved in a locker would still suck, even in 2023.
weak
@@pelmeni_va could you use that word in a sentence please?
We need a part 2 😂
Nobody actually pays attention to this, but bullies assaulting other kids for money is a crime. Outside school its called "stealing".
I wonder if someone has ever been arrested for this at school.
No, because they’re minors.
bullies didn't act like this in the 80s... bullies in MOVIES acted like this in the 80s...
From now on, everytime i hear a bad joke i will just repeat it with a question mark at the end, followed by a histerical laugh.
Why does this man laugh so genuinely?
💀bruh I’m dead, you gotta make more of these💀
I think it'd go like this:
1980's bully: "hey, nerd give me your lunch money..."
1980's bully: "HOLY SHIT- ARE YOU BUYING A HOUSE?!??!??"
That's ridiculous, nobody can afford a house in 2023
I don’t get it, is the nerd buying a home or is the nerd now an adult and is buying a house, or is this a joke on how housing is expensive now. I’m confused.
This is like a bit from Eric Andre's show
@@AnAdalaze The older generations could buy houses with the money on their wallets, our generation cannot even dream of doing that
@@guilhermeteodosio40 oh so it’s a joke on expensive housing? Ok I didn’t get it it looked like the nerd just decided to buy a house out of no where and it surprised the bully.
“Some npc” was brutal bro violated him
Ngl I find 1980's bullies way scarier lmao
That's why disciplining kids is important. Otherwise they turn out like...that...
Same. Nowadays the worst that can happen to you is getting called “cringe”
@@mynameisreallycool1What do you mean? There’s less discipline now and less bullying too
@@krystiankowalski7335 Exactly, no idea why they'd think that. More punishment doesn't mean better behaved kids. There's a variety of factors, discipline can be effective or ineffective depending on the person and situation. Although I'd say it should be obvious to someone with empathy that we need to avoid harming children when possible, which is pretty much all the time.....
Most of these are stereotypes though. I dont think they were all saying cheesy catch phrases from tv and movies
I actually thought of an idea for a movie that you get the 80s bullies versus the bullies today and how much different it would be. 😂
Bro accidentally took a time machine into 2024.
Using Chatgpt to make a full length movie
In the quaint town of Fairview, Johnny Thompson reigned supreme as the classic 80s bully. His mullet and denim jacket were badges of honor, and he ruled the hallways of Fairview High with a swagger that struck fear into the hearts of his classmates.
One ordinary day after football practice, Johnny, surrounded by his gang of loyal followers, spotted a nerdy kid named Chris engrossed in some sort of device.
"Go away, nerd," Johnny sneered, shoving Chris aside. "What's this? One of your little loser devices you made because you're a loser, stupid nerd?"
The device made a loud noise and temporarily blinded Johnny.
"Where'd he go? Why, I oughta-"
"Whatever. It's time for lunch," Johnny declared, brushing off the encounter.
Later, during lunch, Johnny spotted another target, a kid he thought looked like an easy mark.
"Hey, kid, yeah, you. What, you gotta need lunch money I could borrow?" Johnny sneered.
"What, dude? No one carries around physical money for lunch. Are you broke or something?" the modern-day kid replied, looking unimpressed.
"You little punk, quit messing with me before you get yourself a swirly."
"A swirly?! Bro this isn't a 1980s teen Netflix original," the kid retorted, rolling his eyes.
Confused and frustrated, Johnny's attempts to assert dominance continued to backfire. As the day progressed, he found himself in a classroom, trying to intimidate students during a test.
"Yo, what's up, Grant?" one student greeted another.
"Yo, Tyler, who was that kid?"
"I don't know, some NPC."
"Netflix? Probably some nerd crap. And remember to add your units; you won't get full credit unless you-"
"Sorry, I'm late, teach."
"You're a whole five minutes late, and this is the biggest test of the year!
"Oh, my bad."
As Johnny's attempts to navigate the modern world continued to fail, he stumbled upon a group of students making paper spit balls during a lecture.
"Everyone, look at this! Actually trying to get school-did you rip out your whole test to make spit balls?"
"You failed. Get out of my class!"
Frustrated and increasingly out of place, Johnny's once-mighty reputation began to crumble. Even the classic bullying tactic of shoving someone into a locker was met with confusion.
"Come on, guys, let's get out of here."
"Guys, there's not a single person behind you, and why do you walk like that?"
"Hey, kid, do my homework for me, or I'll shove you into a locker."
As Johnny wandered through the corridors of Fairview High, baffled by the strange devices and unfamiliar faces, an elderly staff member named Mrs. Johnson caught sight of him. Her eyes widened with recognition as she stared at the man who seemed frozen in time.
"Johnny? Johnny Thompson?" she gasped, her voice trembling with disbelief.
Johnny, still reeling from the shock of the modern world, looked at her with confusion. "Uh, yeah, that's me. Who are you?"
Mrs. Johnson led Johnny to a dusty storage room filled with old yearbooks and newspapers. She pulled out an ancient yearbook, flipping through its yellowed pages until she found the photo of a young, mullet-sporting Johnny.
"You disappeared over four decades ago. You're the kid who went missing!" Mrs. Johnson exclaimed, pointing to the black-and-white photo.
As Johnny stared at the image of his younger self, the reality of his situation hit him like a ton of bricks. Mrs. Johnson then showed him newspaper clippings reporting his mysterious disappearance and the emotional turmoil it caused in the community.
"I'm in the future?" Johnny mumbled, his eyes wide with disbelief.
Mrs. Johnson nodded solemnly. "Yes, Johnny. You've been missing for over 40 years. Everyone thought you were gone forever."
A whirlwind of emotions engulfed Johnny as he absorbed the news. With a heavy heart, he left the confines of Fairview High to explore the world beyond, hoping to find remnants of the life he once knew.
His journey led him to the graveyard, where he discovered the tombstones of his friends and family. Tears welled up in his eyes as he realized the irreversible passage of time. His parents, his once-annoying younger sibling, and even his childhood friends had all moved on or passed away.
Determined to connect with his past, Johnny set out to find his younger sibling, who was now in their 40s with children of their own. When he finally tracked them down, there was a bittersweet reunion. They lamented the fact that they never got to know each other, that Johnny had disappeared before they could grow up together.
This revelation shook Johnny to his core. With newfound purpose, he decided to make the most of the time he had left in this strange future. He worked tirelessly to understand the technology, culture, and values of the present, bridging the gap between the past and the present.
The rest of the story unfolded as Johnny, armed with a fresh perspective on life, embarked on a quest to find a way to return to his own time. Along the way, he formed unlikely friendships, learned valuable life lessons, and discovered the power of second chances.
As the movie reached its climax, Johnny faced a choice - to stay in the future and embrace the opportunities it offered or to return to his own time with a newfound appreciation for the people he had lost. The story became a poignant exploration of the impact of time, regret, and the importance of cherishing every moment.
I actually really love this story xD
I WANT A MOVIE OF THIS!!!!!!1
@@jamescourt6554 tiktok series coming soon shhhh
Nice story.
Shut up and take my money!
Wait, the 80's kid didn't throw a single punch? If 80's bullies were anything like 90's bullies, things tended to get physical pretty quickly.
1:08 How I walk after stealin lunch money
“Hey Teach” 💀
I just found your content and it makes me laugh so much, here's my sub
"a swirly? PAHAHA" got me rolling in stitches to the ER