A horror movie seems perfectly suited for a math class. Shows you how to subtract lives, add a body count, multiply trauma and divide by how many years of therapy you're going to need after this.
Another theory that comes to mind is that the Math Teacher continued playing it under the "Well you asked for it, so now your gonna sit through the whole thing." mindset.
I have a daughter in 4th grade. She's ten. He was showing this to ten year olds. She's a sweet kid and she would be absolutely horrified if forced to watch this. I would be absolutely outraged if this happened to her.
@@Felonious_Gru....all they said was that they got a 4th grader didn't share any of her actual information like her name, school, etc etc. literally just said got a 10 year old 4th grader girl.
I remember my elementary school made our parents sign permission slips just to watch a PG movie, so these kids being shown an unrated movie is just unbelievable.
This reminds me, in high school the Spanish teacher took a class to see a play and midway through the actress unexpectedly ripped off all her clothes and started dancing and flopping all around the stage completely nude. The teacher balled her eyes out the entire bus ride back and had to email all the parents profusely apologizing 😂
What pisses me off most is they didn't even show them a good horror movie. If you're gonna traumatize a bunch of school children, at least do it right.
No shit, these kids could've watched something like The Mummy or The Thing instead and at least been able to walk away traumatized by something that's actually worth a damn.
@iaacryign3002 I was younger than that age range, watching all the classic slashers. The only difference, I guess, is yes, I shouldn't have been watching them, but I did want to watch them.
In elementary school we had this program that kept kids in school until 6pm where youd play games and watch movies, it was meant for parents whose jobs didnt let them pick their kids up when school actually ended. One of the supervisors there let us watch an R rated movie, but he AT THE VERY LEAST skipped the gore parts and asked us many times if we were too scared to keep watching. This is lunacy.
I was in something similar! It’s called boys & girls club. Idk what yours was but it might’ve been the same thing. It was cool having ppl that were younger be in charge bc they were a little more realistic about what kids like and what’s appropriate. Also it’s cool that club exists for parents that have to work and can’t get them right away
@missyelliot6237 Yours sounds similar, except the people supervising us were often the teachers or other supervisors that were middle-aged. We called it Service de Garde, French for "Keeping Service" which I just realized doesn't translate into English very well
@@Constantine_Cvl8 Well my parents were at work when my school days started. Back where iam from everyone walks/rides bike To school so it just sounds so crazy To get rid every day.
I never thought a teacher would be that chaotic to show an entire class of 4th graders a bad movie about childhood characters getting butchered into psychopaths along with boobs being shown flopping around for math. At least the students learned something: This teacher is clearly insane
it wasn't in 4th grade but one of my teachers in high school would put any movie on no matter how much violence or nudity was in it. I do remember him saying "You guys are going to get me fired" that class was the best tho
oh damn bijuu mike, nice to see ya. Also, I had a weird experience that went on in 3rd grade, it was with my music teacher. We had music class, where we would just sing lyrics of songs. Occasionally during seasons we would watch old cartoons films, like Mickey mouse, and spooky scary skeletons. One time, he was angry at the class, unsure what was the reason why he got mad, but he decided to put a video of some dude playing a piano, and in the background, you would hear people texting/ talking on their phone. This got to the point where the dude playing the piano grabbed his gun and shot. When I returned in the 4th grade, he was no longer our music teacher. Edit: Apparently no one thought this was real, I'm not joking. This actually did happen. It has been exactly 10 years since that happened, so I wouldn't know the exact details but this did happen. This story does sound fucking stupid but it is true lmao.
Sad thing is that the school probably can’t let the teacher go, either because of lack of resources to fill the position or some good-intentioned-poor-execution anti-fire policy like we had in my school area as a kid.
@@missyelliot6237you dont think a teacher fulfilling his fetish in witnessing 4th graders fearfully watching a movie about an innocent childhood figure being turned into a mass murderer is enough to get fired? You think such a crazy disgusting person is someone that should be around little kids and is a good influence and safe environment for them? Or you really think it was an "accident" that he picked exactly such a movie? And an "accident" that he didnt turn it off even after the students begging?
@@baadlyrics8705 okay, let’s be real here - that probably wasn’t someone fufilling a fetish. When this incident happened it was shortly before Halloween, so I imagine he picked a movie from the school library that he thought would be a scary movie. I don’t think it was right for him to leave it on, which is the only thing that he seemed to do wrong here - which is why I suggested heartily reprimanding him. He chose a movie that he probably didn’t know what bad bc it was literally offered by the school. That’s a honest mistake. Just because there was nudity in it doesn’t mean that he specifically chose it to fulfill a kink, that doesn’t make sense. He would’ve had to have looked through every single movie the school offered, *every single one,* and hope that there was one that was inappropriate for the class. It just doesn’t make any sense. He shouldn’t have left it on but I don’t think he chose to do this to get himself off…
It seems like the person being interviewed might speak Spanish as a first language, in Spanish teacher is "profesor/a", which is much closer to "professor" than "teacher". Similar to how English-speaking people might call themselves "embarasado/a" when speaking Spanish assuming it means embarrassed, but it actually means pregnant. These words are called false cognates.
@@MuammarQadaffi in order to be a cognate, a word must have the same meaning and a form that not only looks the same but is derived from the same parent word. Since professor and profesor/a do not have the same meaning but have similar forms, they are false cognates. A professor in English refers exclusively to someone with the rank of professor at a college or university, this is not the definition of profesor/a in Spanish.
@@afckingegg7585 One of the definitions when you google it: "A teacher or instructor. " So it can be used in the same setting as teacher but it's uncommon.
@@austincox1239 Probably because if he was willing to show this to kids, the idea that he'd have some very illegal content on his computer comes feels very plausible.
@@austincox1239 pedo files get off on ruining children's innocence, so it's possible that this was a fetish for him. Though it's not guaranteed, he could just be a idiot or something.
@@harajukugirlforever I mean, CEOs get paid well and they essentially do nothing all day. I think increasing incentive would just push the bad ones to be worse.
Isn't showing nudity to children something that would get you put on a registry? This teacher should be sued by the school, lose teachers license and be criminally charged.
Jesus fucking christ? You want to label someone as a sex offender, make him lose his job and send him to court for a Pooh horror movie? This isn't an adult movie chill the f out...
Even if the kids did `force` the professor to watch the movie in class (which is probably a lie he made up), they also asked him to stop it. Not stopping the movie after they asked is way worse than letting them watch it in the first place imo.
While I don't condone the teacher keeping it on, after seeing it was innapropriate, kids that age, before I graduated, would be crushing and snorting smarties, watching happy tree friends, and more stuff. I don't doubt some of those children willingly wanted to watch it since children tend to be drawn to things that aren't supposed to be for them. It was the responsibility of the teacher to turn it off, regardless.
@@the_indecisiveartist_5850 such a stupid argument. You grew up around kids whose parents couldn't care less about what they exposed their children to at an early age. I don't think we should now make it the norm that children have their innocence destroyed at earlier and earlier ages.
I don’t think the kids asked anybody to stop it. I think the kids even if they wanted it to stop didn’t say that until after class was over, mainly to just save their own asses (which wouldn’t be necessary this is on the teacher alone) to I just think that would be obvious. You know some of those kids if not all aren’t allowed to watch those movies at home so they were probably thinking they were going to get in trouble.
Man I had a teacher who on his LAST DAY of school (as he was retiring) showed The 3rd/4th grade class terminator. There was an uproar amongst the parents but it was too late for any real repercussions.
There is a zero percent chance this was a mistake. Made worse by the fact that he let this go for 20-30 minutes. He intentionally traumatized those kids and should never be allowed to teach again.
They were very quick to provide therapy too while still defending the teacher. This isn't a regular school. I think they are doing psychological tests on these kids.
I'm inclined to believe it was teacher's weird fetish rather than an honest mistake. The fact that he picked a movie about tarnished childhood innocence (yes I doubt student picked the movie), and the act of showing that to a 4th grader despite them telling him to stop... Yeah if they don't have a concrete evidence that it really was an honest mistake, the teacher should be charged tbh.
@@FlighterFighter This movie is essentially a pornographic fictional snuff film. Do you seriously not understand how that can be inappropriate to show a child against their will?
I've seen a couple R rated movies in school before but they were 1. Relevant to the curriculum 2. Had permission slips before hand We watched Glory in my middle school US History class. That was pretty badass, and educational.
I graduated high school with, somehow, multiple Advanced Placement math classes and I just now realized what the FOIL method is. I legitimately learned something math related today. My head hurts now.
@@bastialonso8354nah im Mexican and is neither, you can call them both it doesn’t really matter. But Profesor is more formal, also it has a deeper meaning, you say Profesor because they are professionals and they teach, however you can also say Maestro cuz it’s the traducción of teacher on Spanish
I can definitely say as a teacher students definitely have asked for gore/scary movies as young as second grade. Granted I don’t play them regardless, but damn that was a move.
I had a new third grader join my class this month and the first thing he shared about himself is that he enjoys killing hookers in GTAV, a game which also features graphic torture scenes~
@@__Listen_to_Solar_Kama_Sutra I've heard about it; I had a colleague who LOVED horror film. He once managed to get 600 DVDs for 50 SEK, so you can guess the quality of those movies. He was THRILLED and showed many of them to the students, who were deeply traumatized. There was one about some vacuum cleaner monster on an island that affected them greatly; they wandered around aimlessly looking like all joie the vivre had been sucked out of them after that one. If I wanted to torture the students I could go low tech and just sing for them. It would be traumatizing enough.
Ah yes. This reminds me of the time my 7th grade science teacher thought it’d be a great idea to play The Impossible as a “reward”. Brings back fond memories of the time my friends and I spent covering our ears in the neighboring classroom desperately trying to distract ourselves from the horrible sounds of violence and suffering blasting from the speakers
That seems like a decent enough movie to show to seventh graders. Idk some people were this soft like damn if you got traumatized by a movie that isn’t even supposed to traumatize you that’s kind of crazy.
@@onesaucynougat7471 There’s some genuinely horrible shit in that movie dude (gore, violence, suffering, etc.) especially for a kid who hasn’t had a lot of exposure to that type of content. Either you’ve had low empathy your whole life and that stuff never bothered you or you aren’t actually thinking of it from the perspective of a seventh grader.
Last year was my Freshman year of HS and we watched that during our tsunami unit in EarthSpace. It really wasn't too bad in terms of gore and violence. Our teacher told us it would get graphic at some parts but those parts weren't very bad.
Lmfao. This is a lie. The teachers union protects bad teachers. In the news reporting even a parent complained that they’re doing an “internal investigation like they always do.” There’s literally teachers who brag about their seniority and how they’re on untouchable. MF like you really be spreading BS all the time. Hop off bro.
@__Listen_to_Solar_Kama_Sutra children are required to go to school if you can't do your job taking care of kids and ensuring their safety then you deserve a lot a worse than being fired don't work a job if you're gonna fuck it up
He probably thought "well Winnie the Pooh is too childish for fourth graders... but blood and gore is too adult, so Winnie the Pooh with blood and gore is a perfect middle ground!"
"Blood and gore is for 18 years and older, Winnie the Pooh is for 0 years and older. The average of 18 and 0 is 9, so they're the perfect age to watch this film!"
One day my old 4th grade teacher for health class told us she’d be out the next day so a substitute would be playing a video for us and she just told us to take notes on things in the video and how they relate to what weve covered. She said it was a quick video. We were learning about muscles and organs at the time. Well our substitute was another teacher who taught history in the school who everyone found creepy because he had a very wheezy voice and there were many rumors surrounding him being a “child enthusiast.” He came in and played a short film about if the world was flipped where being gay was normal and being straight was taboo. The movie ends with the straight girl killing herself with blood being shown in a bathtub if I remember correctly. No one took any notes and two girls cried. The next day we asked our teacher why she wanted us to watch that video. She said that wasn’t the video she sent him and she apologized up and down we had to see it. I had the creepy teacher for my social studies class so when I had him the next day I told him the health teacher said you weren’t supposed to play that video and he just denied that he played any video at all.
This reminds me of this substitute teacher I had in second grade. He would tell us about stuff like roller coaster decapitations at Disneyland. Just terrible tragedies being told to 7 year Olds.
i had one that told a story about people on a plane dying a horrific death from ebola and exactly what it did to the human body - subbing for a french class lol
Like the substitute teacher I had that told us about the time he watched a Navy Seal sniper with a Barrett .50 rifle shoot a Somali man carrying an RPG with an explosive round and there was a wager on if the explosive charge would go off if it hit a soft target, turns out it does go off. Also had a substitute that was a legitimate former Miss USSR model. She was really mean, but also still kinda hot so that made me confused.
This exact thing happened in Ohio, 2013. A substitute teacher named Sheila Kearns showed a bunch of students in 5 classes the movie “ABC’s of Death” which is also an ultra gorey movie. How tf can this situation happen twice, I’m flabbergasted
in 8th grade, my history teacher used to make us watch M rated films about the medieval times and such. he had a little notebook he carried to the movie room in which he'd (after taking his sweet time to watch the movie at home) write down timestamps of gore/inappropriate scenes so he could skip them, while we were all already 13, 14 or 15 years old. crazy how this 4th grade teacher played a horror movie for his students and refused to turn it off after being asked to by the kids!
I had a substitute in middles school that was supposed to show us a law and order type math show. He ended up playing the wrong episode that was about kidnapping birthday clowns. This was also happened during the whole clown scare in 2015-2017.
@@Earthboundmikebasically a small point in time where people dressed as clowns and scared people. Most clowns usually chase down people or intimidate them by holding a knife. Sometimes even both. Many fun stories And speaking of, I need to go check out some more to pass the time
Canadian here. Reading alot of these comments im surprised about how many schools made kids have to get a parents signature for movies. The school system showed us in Gr7 a Residential School documentary that was a reenactment of real events, there was a scene where a native girl already with broken legs from being pushed down the stairs got r***** by multiple catholic priests. Many other terrible things were in this documentary, but by far this was the worse scene. Many angry parents i remember, especially First Nations one because yeah the school was educating us about how awful Canada was/is but still such graphic stuff. School is weird huh. All around the world its f**ked
the takes me back to my 5th grade teacher, we had class party’s weekly, we’d get side tracked almost daily there was even days where we would have a whole lesson planned and ended up getting popcorn and watching movies, we still scored the highest on state testing and i somehow got into a higher math class the next year
I remember in "my days" (graduated in 2013) where when we needed to watch PG13/ rated R, we had to get signed signatures from our parents (we'd be under 13/17 most of those times). A majority of the time, it was education related. Kids definitely learned something that day. I can believe a lot of kids signed up for the option thinking they'd be cool and immediately regret it. I just don't understand how that was allowed to be an option. It makes me question more of math was taught in this class cause this whole equation ain't adding.
So imagine being the desensitized kid who already watched this movie, intentionally suggested it to the teacher for a movie to watch (and the teacher clearly not knowing any better), watching this all go down and the teacher getting the blame. Thats just one scenario playing out in my head lmao
There's no way a teacher wouldn't know better. It's the teacher's job to make sure the movie is appropriate. Kids are gonna be kids and suggest things they shouldn't see.
No, they're different things. In the sunk-cost fallacy, there's at least a hopeful expectation that there'd be some RoI at the end. In the too-far-gone threshold, you know you're screwed and nothing good's gonna come out of it, but you just hunker down and see it to the end.
@@ZK_-hs5es I would be so creeped out if that was done to me. If people were replicating my voice or image with AI. Makes me shudder. I can’t believe we are literally living in a Black Mirror episode
"I'm calling fish paste, that's a load of barnacles." "I don't think the children chose Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey. But lets suspend disbelief here for a second that they did, why would that even be an option here?"
Charlie said slope intercept form and I got nam flashbacks to this nightmare college course I had to take twice. Set off like an actual trauma response. 😆
Huh, I remember in high school that Ancient History got to watch 300 Spartans and then 300... 300 required permission slips but hey it related to the subject matter. And it was supposed to educate people on how current history can shape portrayals of ancient history. Since 300 Spartans was made during the Cold War and thus had that sort of bias while 300 is just well... 300? In English class in like 9th grade or something I remember permission slips were needed to play "Shakespeare In Love" Not sure about the modern-day era Romeo & Juliet though that also got played... I think that required parental permission as well? Funnily enough Science classes didn't need permission. I got to watch a film about electricity where a little kid got fatally electrocuted trying to retrieve a ball from a power transformer... sure they didn't show the actual electrocution but the aftermath was portrayed with police informing everyone of the death, the kids being reminded of what their teacher told them (If only they had paid attention in class!) etc.
As a little girl who (not proudly) watched gore (exposed to the internet before the internet was more regulated), this is insane. I wouldn’t imagine exposing a child to such levels of violence. It really does fuck with your development and I’m pretty sure it triggered my intrusive thinking. I hope those kids get the proper therapy and teaching they deserve. Wtf is wrong with people…
@@habibishapur Yeah, like me watching I S I S dousing people in gasoline and burning them alive at the age of 5, but I'm also not a complete dipsh!t who's going to gloat about 'being tough' at the rude expense of someone else. Grow up.
One of my teachers put on Human Centipede in class, dunno what grade I was in at the time but I definitely remember watching it in my old primary/or middle school classroom as a little goober.
"The average human has about 1.4 gallons of blood in their body, and Winnie killed 6 people via exsanguination. How many gallons of blood were drained?"
I was in 5th grade and my teacher showed my class a heavily graphic 9/11 documentary. Traumatized me and the whole class. That guy was an idiot. Never liked that teacher.
Back in my 4th grading we would have this annual event at our elementary school called "Fun-day" where there would be tons of booths, games, activities and stuff. There was an official movie booth where they would deadass show R-rated horror movies like IT and all the elementary students loved watching all those horror movies. Mind you the teachers were approving of them watching horror movies at school which was pretty crazy.
People should calculate how much money they waste by going to see therapists . I never needed no therapist and I turned out okay *wipes the drool and blood from my chin*
Teacher was so excited to watch the movie that he put it on during class and ignored the kids pleading until he finally realized it was terrible. Not because of the sad children, but the movie itself
my guess is probably some loud kids who’s guardians let them watch that kind of stuff at home suggested it. I once went over to a person’s house and their grandma was babysitting a bunch of kids no older than 5 and was watching Child’s Play the chucky movie on TV. I asked her “aren’t the kids too young for this? is it ok for them to be watching this?” and she just said it was fine. I could tell that she only said it was ok because she wanted to keep watching it. Some people really just don’t understand how vulnerable kids can be
I remember in my 12th grade English class, we watched the 2006 Beowulf movie. That's a pretty violent movie itself, with some minor nudity (certainly nothing on par with a woman's tits flopping all about in plain view), but 1. We were 12th graders about to go into college, and 2. It was actually part of that lesson because we were actually studying the original story of Beowulf and comparing how the movie differed from the original story. I can't think of any movies at all that would be shown in a Math class, at least none that aren't for toddlers, that would be relevant for a lesson. What makes me somewhat morbidly curious is, why of all inappropriate movies there are for 4th graders, why did he go with Blood and Honey? part of me can't help but feel like he went with it on purpose because its Winnie the Pooh. What better way to traumatize kids even further than to show them a horrifying version of something part of their childhood, while they're still in their childhood!
Perhaps some biopic of a famous mathematician for a high school class (although other than Alan Turing, there isn't really a good example of a great mathematician biopic and even Alan Turing is more of a computer scientist). For fourth grade, there are some PBS math focused series (Cyber chase would be a good example) you could show on a lazy Friday as a reward, but never something like that.
@howboutno412 Did you forget those nipples happened to be attached to a gory slasher film as well? Showing violent murder to 4th graders is way worse than nudity.
I remember around my 9th grade Algebra class, my Algebra teacher would play Stand and Deliver after we finished our finals which had some lessons we learned from that year. It had some risque moments but it was a very relatable and good movie. It just irks me that he didn't even stop the movie if he assumed that the movie was actually about Winnie the Pooh and was PG. I had a fair share of teachers that would play random movies that didn't relate to their class but they were usually PG or PG 13. Guess that really is one way to truly traumatize children!
Two years in a row, my Radio/TV class would play Anchorman, and both times my teacher would "accidentally" black out the screen when it was mention Ron pitching a tent. The first year was decently believable, whereas the second it seemed he was playing it up. Like, "yeah we know what's going on, just wait it out"
As a kid my dad turned on gory movies and it honestly did traumatize me for a long time. I can still remember the scenes. So i cant imagine what those kids went through emotionally :(
you really cant imagine it because your story is complete BS 100% fake. also boring. i mean if youre gonna fake it at least make it interesting. you must suck to talk to.
not gonna aregue that the teacher is in the wrong here, cause he is, but what fucking hurdles do you have to leap on to go from "teacher showed a movie in class and wouldnt stop it despite being asked to" to "teacher showed a movie to get off on the fact that kids were scared" those arent even close to being the same thing, accusing someone of being a masochistic pedophile because they showed a horror movie in class is a huge fucking leap
@@colossalnate156True, but given the reasons that teachers typically make the news, it wouldn't be surprising, either. It's an unfounded assumption, sure, but I have to admit my mind went to the same place just because the most outrageous things don't seem that unlikely anymore with the way some people behave.
Watching this at work on break and of course my boss walks in right at “titties start flopping around” I can’t stop laughing like wtf I thought this was a safe space 😂
In the third grade, my teacher would play the most horrifying and disturbing R rated movies all the time. It traumatized me so much I would have breakdowns every day about having to go to school. My teacher labeled me as a 'brat' that was trying to get out of class and would watch me to make sure I was looking at the screen. To this day I still can't watch most horror movies... Seeing this all come out about this fourth grade class, and seeing all the backlash is CRAZY to me, since it was so normalized when I was little and had such a huge and negative impact on me.
Even if it's years later and that teacher is probably not teaching anymore, you should still come out and tell the school and the school board what they did. That teacher should be punished and publicly shamed, even if it's many years after. That's so sick what they did, it's even worse that they got away with it. I'm so sorry for you and the other kids that had to go through that 😢
@@jenniferb.awesome to be honest, I've been thinking about doing that... My mom really wants me to since even now as an adult, it still affects my life. I just don't want to cause any unnecessary extra pain for anyone... 😞 Although, I heard she is still teaching, so the idea that me telling the school board may make it so that no other student of hers has to go through this again. I'm not sure if she is doing it still, since during my third grade year she was getting married and buying a house, so she put on tons of movies since she didn't want to focus on teaching... (still doesn't make it okay), but hopefully now that she's in a different place in her life, it isn't still happening 😢
When I was in Elementary school one of the kids tricked the teacher into letting us watch Baseketball by taking the rating sticker off a G rated movie and overlapping the R rating. Good times.
Not sure if anybody else said this, but what you mentioned at 6:30 is known as the sunk-cost fallacy (on Wikipedia, there is a page called Escalation of Commitment of a similar principle).
Something similar happened in my school when I was in 5th grade. Whole school got to watch the dark knight in the auditorium & 1 coward apparently was afraid of the movie & ruined everyone elses experience.
I had an English teacher in high school show a movie that had a grape (remove the g) scene. A very explicit one where the woman was screaming and the man was and watchers were laughing. I was graped as a child, so I was kind of… out of it for the rest of the day. She called anyone who didn’t want to watch it and left the classroom “sensitive.”
fun fact, the "too fargone so fuck it" threshold Charlie mentions actually has a name in psychology. It's called the Sunk Cost Fallacy, where if you've put a lot of your capitol into something (time, attention, or money), you're more likely to see it through to the end. Like watching a video, getting bored, but staying because there's only 3 more minutes and you've sat there this long already
Or sticking with a poker hand too much when you already know it’s shit because you’ve already added too much to the pot, so you “might as well keep betting and see it through”
to be honest, when i was in fourth grade our teacher had us watch Final Destination 5 and we all loved it (though i still have a fear of bridges to this day) and we all were eager to watch it, but the teacher told us before what it was about and that it was pretty scary, so... I feel like the bad part in this case is the fact he refused to turn it off despite the kids begging him to.
seeing charlie’s smile sparked a gleam in my eye and a slight palpitation of the heart. my grandmother was watching as well and now she can walk again. my goodness, may charlie inspire millions once more
I heard this story on the radio! They left out the part that they were 4th graders until the end of the story. I started dying with my family because it was so unbelievable. In Miami too, no less.
I remember when I was in 4th grade, there was a week we spent watching movies as classes were almost over. In one they put the Annabelle movie. I left the classroom because I was scared and had nightmares for a week. I've rewatched the movie years later, now I'm 17 and it's no longer scary lol.
I can see this as an episode. Mr. Garrison plays this movie for the whole class and the boys tell how shitty the movie is and that he traumatized some kids.
my french class in hs we watched i am legend (bootlegged before dvd release legally in english too) i passed french 1&2 bc she liked me so can't complain
The fact that their not instantly thinking about firing him is insane. He purposely traumatized those kids, it's something pretty sadistic to wnat to do to 4th graders. I would beyond passed if I was one of the parents
Traumatizing kids is what the school system is all about.
Replying first so bots don’t
Don't read my name 😒 ....
@@Pinwheelman. you were 17 seconds before the first bot lmfao that was quick
Fr
That's why I'm never going to put my kids through it.
A horror movie seems perfectly suited for a math class. Shows you how to subtract lives, add a body count, multiply trauma and divide by how many years of therapy you're going to need after this.
At that point you could just watch a Kill Count of the movie
when did people get so soft holy shit
@@zacharygiles2984showing nudity and gore to kids? Not something you would call soft, most definitely unacceptable
@@TeenPerspektiva crybaby
@@zacharygiles2984 You already lost the argument, stop trying so hard.
Another theory that comes to mind is that the Math Teacher continued playing it under the "Well you asked for it, so now your gonna sit through the whole thing." mindset.
Most believable theory yet
I have a daughter in 4th grade. She's ten. He was showing this to ten year olds. She's a sweet kid and she would be absolutely horrified if forced to watch this. I would be absolutely outraged if this happened to her.
Replying before the bots do
I do not think it is safe to say you have a daughter. Especially a young one. Be careful out there.
@@Felonious_Gru.what?
@@Felonious_Gru....all they said was that they got a 4th grader didn't share any of her actual information like her name, school, etc etc. literally just said got a 10 year old 4th grader girl.
@@Chaddd_dAnd that’s all I need to go after her 😈.
This is actually a good math lesson. It helps students calculate the chances a movie is going to be absolute ass
@@OfficerBMTFBI OPEN UP
Now they know the correlation between 3 dead adults and 5 empty honey jars. Quick and efficient maths.
@@calmdownbruh8518 💀
@@OfficerBMTWell I asked
arse
I remember my elementary school made our parents sign permission slips just to watch a PG movie, so these kids being shown an unrated movie is just unbelievable.
It's actually not rated.
It's not rated. Which is probably why it was available for viewing in the school's digital library.
it’s not rated
No it's believable
@@elaexplorerwhy does the school have blood and honey on a digital library for teachers
This reminds me, in high school the Spanish teacher took a class to see a play and midway through the actress unexpectedly ripped off all her clothes and started dancing and flopping all around the stage completely nude. The teacher balled her eyes out the entire bus ride back and had to email all the parents profusely apologizing 😂
Sounds like a successful field trip to me. 😅
Was that part of the play or was she just doing some wild shit?
Hey, if all highschool age kids I don't see the problem 😁
@@lucrussell9363 it was part of the play. And right before the people running the play told her that it was age appropriate 😂
ROFL
It's a serious red flag. If something bad happens in the future and the school hasn't done anything about this man, there's gonna be a HUGE lawsuit.
What pisses me off most is they didn't even show them a good horror movie. If you're gonna traumatize a bunch of school children, at least do it right.
No shit, these kids could've watched something like The Mummy or The Thing instead and at least been able to walk away traumatized by something that's actually worth a damn.
Most "horror" attempts are just that
I feel like the original Alien movie would have been better.
@@EagleTimberWolf lmao i got fucked up from seeing the opening of the mummy on tv when i was like, 5 or 6. Good times.
@ShadowSkyX they aren't right
Not turning the movie off after the students were probably screaming and crying at him to do for 30 minutes really says something about his character.
Indeed.
Yeah man, thats a group of 9-10 year olds, they shouldn’t be watching that at all, especially when they don’t want to!!
Let's be honest too. The teacher played it because they were too lazy to do their job
@iaacryign3002 I was younger than that age range, watching all the classic slashers. The only difference, I guess, is yes, I shouldn't have been watching them, but I did want to watch them.
The teacher found new lows of degeneracy that I thought couldn’t exist.
In elementary school we had this program that kept kids in school until 6pm where youd play games and watch movies, it was meant for parents whose jobs didnt let them pick their kids up when school actually ended. One of the supervisors there let us watch an R rated movie, but he AT THE VERY LEAST skipped the gore parts and asked us many times if we were too scared to keep watching. This is lunacy.
I was in something similar! It’s called boys & girls club. Idk what yours was but it might’ve been the same thing. It was cool having ppl that were younger be in charge bc they were a little more realistic about what kids like and what’s appropriate. Also it’s cool that club exists for parents that have to work and can’t get them right away
You People actually get picked up from school every day?
@missyelliot6237 Yours sounds similar, except the people supervising us were often the teachers or other supervisors that were middle-aged. We called it Service de Garde, French for "Keeping Service" which I just realized doesn't translate into English very well
@@jarskii11you must've had very busy parents
@@Constantine_Cvl8 Well my parents were at work when my school days started. Back where iam from everyone walks/rides bike To school so it just sounds so crazy To get rid every day.
I never thought a teacher would be that chaotic to show an entire class of 4th graders a bad movie about childhood characters getting butchered into psychopaths along with boobs being shown flopping around for math. At least the students learned something: This teacher is clearly insane
Chaotic doesn't come close to the deviance
Im surprised people are actually blaming the teacher rather than the movie for once
@OfficerBMTwhat the fuck bro
what the f'@OfficerBMT
I mean both are bad...
@OfficerBMT what the actual fuck bro
@@davidr.742 It's a bot
it wasn't in 4th grade but one of my teachers in high school would put any movie on no matter how much violence or nudity was in it. I do remember him saying "You guys are going to get me fired" that class was the best tho
oh damn bijuu mike, nice to see ya. Also, I had a weird experience that went on in 3rd grade, it was with my music teacher. We had music class, where we would just sing lyrics of songs. Occasionally during seasons we would watch old cartoons films, like Mickey mouse, and spooky scary skeletons. One time, he was angry at the class, unsure what was the reason why he got mad, but he decided to put a video of some dude playing a piano, and in the background, you would hear people texting/ talking on their phone. This got to the point where the dude playing the piano grabbed his gun and shot. When I returned in the 4th grade, he was no longer our music teacher.
Edit: Apparently no one thought this was real, I'm not joking. This actually did happen. It has been exactly 10 years since that happened, so I wouldn't know the exact details but this did happen. This story does sound fucking stupid but it is true lmao.
Sounds like a class for me!
Well at least you all actually asked for them.
BIJUUMIKE YOOOOOOOOO!
Based teacher
“Sir turn it off please”
Teacher: there is nothing we can do
*Napoleon edit music*
Sad thing is that the school probably can’t let the teacher go, either because of lack of resources to fill the position or some good-intentioned-poor-execution anti-fire policy like we had in my school area as a kid.
As messed up as this incident is, I don’t think it warrants being fired. Definitely heavy reprimand tho.
lolwat@@missyelliot6237
@@missyelliot6237you dont think a teacher fulfilling his fetish in witnessing 4th graders fearfully watching a movie about an innocent childhood figure being turned into a mass murderer is enough to get fired? You think such a crazy disgusting person is someone that should be around little kids and is a good influence and safe environment for them? Or you really think it was an "accident" that he picked exactly such a movie? And an "accident" that he didnt turn it off even after the students begging?
@@baadlyrics8705 okay, let’s be real here - that probably wasn’t someone fufilling a fetish.
When this incident happened it was shortly before Halloween, so I imagine he picked a movie from the school library that he thought would be a scary movie.
I don’t think it was right for him to leave it on, which is the only thing that he seemed to do wrong here - which is why I suggested heartily reprimanding him.
He chose a movie that he probably didn’t know what bad bc it was literally offered by the school. That’s a honest mistake.
Just because there was nudity in it doesn’t mean that he specifically chose it to fulfill a kink, that doesn’t make sense. He would’ve had to have looked through every single movie the school offered, *every single one,* and hope that there was one that was inappropriate for the class. It just doesn’t make any sense.
He shouldn’t have left it on but I don’t think he chose to do this to get himself off…
@@missyelliot6237 yel
This could totally be a math lesson.
"Hey kids, if you have two college girls and you saw them both in half, how many college girls do you have?"
😂😂😂😂
Or how many kill count are in Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey.
That just made my day.
4(0.5)
2, because you will still have both pieces of each college girl
The only lesson he taught these kids is to never trust authority again
And that horror movies suck.
They grew up FAST.
If the schools actually taught that they’d be doing something useful for the first time.
Based
Then he did them a favor. The sooner you learn not to trust authority, the better.
why in God's name is this 4th grade math teacher being referred to as a professor
true I was confused the hold time, for a second I thought americans called theacher as professor or something.
It seems like the person being interviewed might speak Spanish as a first language, in Spanish teacher is "profesor/a", which is much closer to "professor" than "teacher". Similar to how English-speaking people might call themselves "embarasado/a" when speaking Spanish assuming it means embarrassed, but it actually means pregnant. These words are called false cognates.
@@afckingegg7585 It's not a false cognate for professor since it can have the same meaning. Just an uncommon word in that setting.
@@MuammarQadaffi in order to be a cognate, a word must have the same meaning and a form that not only looks the same but is derived from the same parent word. Since professor and profesor/a do not have the same meaning but have similar forms, they are false cognates. A professor in English refers exclusively to someone with the rank of professor at a college or university, this is not the definition of profesor/a in Spanish.
@@afckingegg7585
One of the definitions when you google it: "A teacher or instructor. "
So it can be used in the same setting as teacher but it's uncommon.
Ironically, his excuse sounds like something a 4th grader would actually say
I’m so glad to hear Florida Man landed a job as an educator. May he go on to educate the bright and innovative minds of tomorrow.
What’s he gonna do next? Drive a motorcycle into a preschool from 40 stories high from a helicopter?
is this a graystillplays reference or am i missing out on something possibly greater
This is Miami, so it’s more like “any bilingual man who applies”. Florida Man has little power here.
@@Shockwave_987sounds like a fast and furious plot
"If you duct-tape rockets to the hind quarters of a gator, then you got yourself a jet ski with teeth."
- Professor Florida Man
I'll take a hard drive that needs investigating for $500, Alex.
Why would we need to investigate his hard drive?
@@austincox1239 Probably because if he was willing to show this to kids, the idea that he'd have some very illegal content on his computer comes feels very plausible.
Alex is dead😢
It’s weird whenever it’s a guy that does this stuff it immediately goes to pedo shit lol but if a women does it doesn’t
@@austincox1239 pedo files get off on ruining children's innocence, so it's possible that this was a fetish for him. Though it's not guaranteed, he could just be a idiot or something.
This was no "mistake". That teacher was on a dirty mission. He woke up that day and chose violence
Remember, not ALL teachers deserve better pay
Idk maybe if teachers had better pay there would be more competition for teaching jobs and they wouldn’t have to hire wackos like this
@@harajukugirlforever
I mean, CEOs get paid well and they essentially do nothing all day. I think increasing incentive would just push the bad ones to be worse.
@@thispincer8404 yep
Isn't showing nudity to children something that would get you put on a registry? This teacher should be sued by the school, lose teachers license and be criminally charged.
Unless it’s a highschool anatomy class
Yes:)
Jesus fucking christ? You want to label someone as a sex offender, make him lose his job and send him to court for a Pooh horror movie? This isn't an adult movie chill the f out...
That’s what I’m saying
He did that...
He knew what He was doing and will get away with that.
Don't think it counts for films that just show breasts. If there are actual genitals than it would be a different story.
Even if the kids did `force` the professor to watch the movie in class (which is probably a lie he made up), they also asked him to stop it. Not stopping the movie after they asked is way worse than letting them watch it in the first place imo.
Thats merely what that karen claims.
That's probably the school rep just trying to save face. Guaranteed these kids play shit like Warzone and worse.
While I don't condone the teacher keeping it on, after seeing it was innapropriate, kids that age, before I graduated, would be crushing and snorting smarties, watching happy tree friends, and more stuff. I don't doubt some of those children willingly wanted to watch it since children tend to be drawn to things that aren't supposed to be for them.
It was the responsibility of the teacher to turn it off, regardless.
@@the_indecisiveartist_5850 such a stupid argument. You grew up around kids whose parents couldn't care less about what they exposed their children to at an early age. I don't think we should now make it the norm that children have their innocence destroyed at earlier and earlier ages.
I don’t think the kids asked anybody to stop it. I think the kids even if they wanted it to stop didn’t say that until after class was over, mainly to just save their own asses (which wouldn’t be necessary this is on the teacher alone) to I just think that would be obvious. You know some of those kids if not all aren’t allowed to watch those movies at home so they were probably thinking they were going to get in trouble.
Man I had a teacher who on his LAST DAY of school (as he was retiring) showed The 3rd/4th grade class terminator. There was an uproar amongst the parents but it was too late for any real repercussions.
That would’ve been so awesome up until that one scene at the motel. Then I would’ve gotten quite a surprise as a kid lmao.
5:45 i wanna see this animated or a comic strip
That is actually hilarious
There is a zero percent chance this was a mistake. Made worse by the fact that he let this go for 20-30 minutes. He intentionally traumatized those kids and should never be allowed to teach again.
Oh no! A movie :( poor babies. Jk grow up. I was watching horror movies when I was 5. Grow a pair pussies
Ohhh Shutup, they are 4th graders ☠️☠️☠️, not in kindergarten
They were very quick to provide therapy too while still defending the teacher. This isn't a regular school. I think they are doing psychological tests on these kids.
@@Cheeseburger_boyWhy are you dying on this hill?
@@Cheeseburger_boy🔥🔥🔥🔥💯💯💯💯💯🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯🤯😱😱😱😱😱😱
I'm inclined to believe it was teacher's weird fetish rather than an honest mistake. The fact that he picked a movie about tarnished childhood innocence (yes I doubt student picked the movie), and the act of showing that to a 4th grader despite them telling him to stop... Yeah if they don't have a concrete evidence that it really was an honest mistake, the teacher should be charged tbh.
Also the fact that there’s nudity in the film too
??????????????????????
I didn’t even think about this, but considering the school system is wrought with pedos, i wouldn’t be one bit surprised
My thoughts exactly. The sick fck probably pursued a teaching career so he can have access to children.
@@FlighterFighter This movie is essentially a pornographic fictional snuff film. Do you seriously not understand how that can be inappropriate to show a child against their will?
I've seen a couple R rated movies in school before but they were
1. Relevant to the curriculum
2. Had permission slips before hand
We watched Glory in my middle school US History class. That was pretty badass, and educational.
yep. Exactly. I was told to watch a film on my own for World War 2 in 6th grade, I signed a permission slip and watched “Flag of our fathers.”
I graduated high school with, somehow, multiple Advanced Placement math classes and I just now realized what the FOIL method is. I legitimately learned something math related today. My head hurts now.
Calling an elementary school teacher a professor is a little bit much.
I had to scroll way too far to find this comment.
Since any teacher is called “profesór” in Spanish, it might have just been a mistake
@@dr.shivago2404 No they're not, maestro is used for primary school and kindergarden teachers, and profesor is used for secondary school and college.
@@twerkingbollocks6661Depends on the country
@@bastialonso8354nah im Mexican and is neither, you can call them both it doesn’t really matter. But Profesor is more formal, also it has a deeper meaning, you say Profesor because they are professionals and they teach, however you can also say Maestro cuz it’s the traducción of teacher on Spanish
I can definitely say as a teacher students definitely have asked for gore/scary movies as young as second grade. Granted I don’t play them regardless, but damn that was a move.
I had a new third grader join my class this month and the first thing he shared about himself is that he enjoys killing hookers in GTAV, a game which also features graphic torture scenes~
Never had that happen to me, but then I didn't show many movies either. I taught instead. Huh. Did it all wrong, I guess.
You should show them The Human Centipede 2
@@__Listen_to_Solar_Kama_Sutra I've heard about it; I had a colleague who LOVED horror film. He once managed to get 600 DVDs for 50 SEK, so you can guess the quality of those movies. He was THRILLED and showed many of them to the students, who were deeply traumatized. There was one about some vacuum cleaner monster on an island that affected them greatly; they wandered around aimlessly looking like all joie the vivre had been sucked out of them after that one.
If I wanted to torture the students I could go low tech and just sing for them. It would be traumatizing enough.
Yeah but even if they did ask to play it, they did repeatedly ask the teacher to turn it off so that's pretty shitty
The power trip teachers have over their students is getting out of hand.
Agreed
Ah yes. This reminds me of the time my 7th grade science teacher thought it’d be a great idea to play The Impossible as a “reward”. Brings back fond memories of the time my friends and I spent covering our ears in the neighboring classroom desperately trying to distract ourselves from the horrible sounds of violence and suffering blasting from the speakers
7th grader? Scared of a decent movie? Damn thats sad
actual loser
That seems like a decent enough movie to show to seventh graders. Idk some people were this soft like damn if you got traumatized by a movie that isn’t even supposed to traumatize you that’s kind of crazy.
@@onesaucynougat7471 There’s some genuinely horrible shit in that movie dude (gore, violence, suffering, etc.) especially for a kid who hasn’t had a lot of exposure to that type of content. Either you’ve had low empathy your whole life and that stuff never bothered you or you aren’t actually thinking of it from the perspective of a seventh grader.
Last year was my Freshman year of HS and we watched that during our tsunami unit in EarthSpace. It really wasn't too bad in terms of gore and violence. Our teacher told us it would get graphic at some parts but those parts weren't very bad.
A lot of educators are excessively punished but there should be no holding back for an incident like this
When they make as little as they do, who cares
Lmfao. This is a lie. The teachers union protects bad teachers. In the news reporting even a parent complained that they’re doing an “internal investigation like they always do.” There’s literally teachers who brag about their seniority and how they’re on untouchable.
MF like you really be spreading BS all the time. Hop off bro.
@@__Listen_to_Solar_Kama_Sutraparents care
@__Listen_to_Solar_Kama_Sutra children are required to go to school if you can't do your job taking care of kids and ensuring their safety then you deserve a lot a worse than being fired don't work a job if you're gonna fuck it up
He probably thought "well Winnie the Pooh is too childish for fourth graders... but blood and gore is too adult, so Winnie the Pooh with blood and gore is a perfect middle ground!"
Big brain mathematics right here.
@@sedeuphadude80He probably thought making them do a kill count like the channel Dead Meat was a good way to practice their attention skills 😂
"Blood and gore is for 18 years and older, Winnie the Pooh is for 0 years and older. The average of 18 and 0 is 9, so they're the perfect age to watch this film!"
One day my old 4th grade teacher for health class told us she’d be out the next day so a substitute would be playing a video for us and she just told us to take notes on things in the video and how they relate to what weve covered. She said it was a quick video. We were learning about muscles and organs at the time. Well our substitute was another teacher who taught history in the school who everyone found creepy because he had a very wheezy voice and there were many rumors surrounding him being a “child enthusiast.” He came in and played a short film about if the world was flipped where being gay was normal and being straight was taboo. The movie ends with the straight girl killing herself with blood being shown in a bathtub if I remember correctly. No one took any notes and two girls cried. The next day we asked our teacher why she wanted us to watch that video. She said that wasn’t the video she sent him and she apologized up and down we had to see it. I had the creepy teacher for my social studies class so when I had him the next day I told him the health teacher said you weren’t supposed to play that video and he just denied that he played any video at all.
oh that was the anti gay propaganda film.
The headline reads "Miami teacher" when this was a perfect opportunity and perfect example of "Florida man"
This reminds me of this substitute teacher I had in second grade. He would tell us about stuff like roller coaster decapitations at Disneyland. Just terrible tragedies being told to 7 year Olds.
But you were never decapitated on a roller coaster, were you? Sounds like YOU might be the jerk.
Jerma can't keep getting away with this
i had one that told a story about people on a plane dying a horrific death from ebola and exactly what it did to the human body - subbing for a french class lol
One time in high school we had a sub that told us all about her dating life. We never saw her again after that.
Like the substitute teacher I had that told us about the time he watched a Navy Seal sniper with a Barrett .50 rifle shoot a Somali man carrying an RPG with an explosive round and there was a wager on if the explosive charge would go off if it hit a soft target, turns out it does go off.
Also had a substitute that was a legitimate former Miss USSR model. She was really mean, but also still kinda hot so that made me confused.
This exact thing happened in Ohio, 2013. A substitute teacher named Sheila Kearns showed a bunch of students in 5 classes the movie “ABC’s of Death” which is also an ultra gorey movie.
How tf can this situation happen twice, I’m flabbergasted
You’re just asking for an OhIo JoKe BrO🤓🤓🤓🤓🤡🤡🤡🤡
Abcs of death was terrible i couldnt finish it. They should do a screening of the VHS movies
Disgusting. I hope she got fired. Only a sick fck gets off from stripping children of their innocence.
@@mcawesomeytyo3312 no...stop...don't tempt any of the gen alpha kids...
in 8th grade, my history teacher used to make us watch M rated films about the medieval times and such. he had a little notebook he carried to the movie room in which he'd (after taking his sweet time to watch the movie at home) write down timestamps of gore/inappropriate scenes so he could skip them, while we were all already 13, 14 or 15 years old. crazy how this 4th grade teacher played a horror movie for his students and refused to turn it off after being asked to by the kids!
I had a friend who went to another school who switched out his teacher's Finding Nemo DVD with the disc for South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut.
I had a substitute in middles school that was supposed to show us a law and order type math show. He ended up playing the wrong episode that was about kidnapping birthday clowns. This was also happened during the whole clown scare in 2015-2017.
Well, at least he was up to date on current events.
Wait, you need to clarify. Was it about a group of people who kidnap clowns or a group of clowns that kidnap people.
... Clown scare in 2015-2017? What?
@@Earthboundmikebasically a small point in time where people dressed as clowns and scared people. Most clowns usually chase down people or intimidate them by holding a knife. Sometimes even both. Many fun stories
And speaking of, I need to go check out some more to pass the time
@@Earthboundmikewhat you don’t remember there was a whole thing in 2017 about killer clowns. I remember being around 10 and being terrified lmao 😅
Canadian here. Reading alot of these comments im surprised about how many schools made kids have to get a parents signature for movies.
The school system showed us in Gr7 a Residential School documentary that was a reenactment of real events, there was a scene where a native girl already with broken legs from being pushed down the stairs got r***** by multiple catholic priests. Many other terrible things were in this documentary, but by far this was the worse scene. Many angry parents i remember, especially First Nations one because yeah the school was educating us about how awful Canada was/is but still such graphic stuff.
School is weird huh. All around the world its f**ked
the takes me back to my 5th grade teacher, we had class party’s weekly, we’d get side tracked almost daily there was even days where we would have a whole lesson planned and ended up getting popcorn and watching movies, we still scored the highest on state testing and i somehow got into a higher math class the next year
I remember in "my days" (graduated in 2013) where when we needed to watch PG13/ rated R, we had to get signed signatures from our parents (we'd be under 13/17 most of those times). A majority of the time, it was education related.
Kids definitely learned something that day. I can believe a lot of kids signed up for the option thinking they'd be cool and immediately regret it. I just don't understand how that was allowed to be an option. It makes me question more of math was taught in this class cause this whole equation ain't adding.
Old head
@@bartlendgrabbel1134he’s like 28 lmao that’s not old you r just really young
@@bartlendgrabbel1134okay zoomer
@@bartlendgrabbel1134he’s 28/29 that’s gonna be you in 18 years lil bro
That still happens today to my knowledge
Still less scary for those students than algebra
Replying first so bots don’t
Don't read my name 😒 ....
damn they got here 12 seconds after you commented that lol@@Pinwheelman.
True
I feel really sorry for you if you found 4th grade algebra "scary".
So imagine being the desensitized kid who already watched this movie, intentionally suggested it to the teacher for a movie to watch (and the teacher clearly not knowing any better), watching this all go down and the teacher getting the blame. Thats just one scenario playing out in my head lmao
There's no way a teacher wouldn't know better. It's the teacher's job to make sure the movie is appropriate. Kids are gonna be kids and suggest things they shouldn't see.
Maybe the filmmakers paid off the teacher to start a viral marketing campaign
My professors are gonna love me referring to the 'sunk-cost fallacy' as 'the too far gone threshold so f*ck it'
No, they're different things.
In the sunk-cost fallacy, there's at least a hopeful expectation that there'd be some RoI at the end.
In the too-far-gone threshold, you know you're screwed and nothing good's gonna come out of it, but you just hunker down and see it to the end.
@@Cenentury0941 🤓🤓🤓
@@Cenentury0941 nerd
@@Cenentury0941 why are people trying to smoke you for giving out knowledge
Your professors are gonna love referring to you as a moron
Charlie should 100% do audio book readings 😂 I would totally listen to him read a story
get him to do voice some LitRPG
Use AI people already make songs with his voice
he totally should! he has a great voice!
@@ZK_-hs5es I would be so creeped out if that was done to me. If people were replicating my voice or image with AI. Makes me shudder. I can’t believe we are literally living in a Black Mirror episode
@@JennaEmbers how so
"I'm calling fish paste, that's a load of barnacles."
"I don't think the children chose Winnie the Pooh: Blood and Honey. But lets suspend disbelief here for a second that they did, why would that even be an option here?"
Charlie said slope intercept form and I got nam flashbacks to this nightmare college course I had to take twice. Set off like an actual trauma response. 😆
I was a senior and our teachers weren't allowed to show movies rated higher than PG 😂 I hope the teacher got in trouble for this
Yeah, we couldn’t even watch the hunger games last year
in my school the movies have to relate to the subject of that class AND be approved by the school
Yea this is Not Rated major🚩
Huh, I remember in high school that Ancient History got to watch 300 Spartans and then 300... 300 required permission slips but hey it related to the subject matter. And it was supposed to educate people on how current history can shape portrayals of ancient history. Since 300 Spartans was made during the Cold War and thus had that sort of bias while 300 is just well... 300?
In English class in like 9th grade or something I remember permission slips were needed to play "Shakespeare In Love"
Not sure about the modern-day era Romeo & Juliet though that also got played... I think that required parental permission as well?
Funnily enough Science classes didn't need permission. I got to watch a film about electricity where a little kid got fatally electrocuted trying to retrieve a ball from a power transformer... sure they didn't show the actual electrocution but the aftermath was portrayed with police informing everyone of the death, the kids being reminded of what their teacher told them (If only they had paid attention in class!) etc.
In high-school one of my teachers played Friday the 13th 2011
As a little girl who (not proudly) watched gore (exposed to the internet before the internet was more regulated), this is insane. I wouldn’t imagine exposing a child to such levels of violence. It really does fuck with your development and I’m pretty sure it triggered my intrusive thinking. I hope those kids get the proper therapy and teaching they deserve. Wtf is wrong with people…
Im sorry for your weakness. Most of us were perusing shock sites at that age, and dont go on to tell dramatic sob stories about it.
@@habibishapur Yeah, like me watching I S I S dousing people in gasoline and burning them alive at the age of 5, but I'm also not a complete dipsh!t who's going to gloat about 'being tough' at the rude expense of someone else. Grow up.
@@FiveDallaHalla embarrassing. Enjoy your pats on the back by other virtue signallers. Thats the normie validation you were craving, right?
thats disgusting@@FiveDallaHalla
@@habibishapur do you not know how wrong you are
@7:00 'Too far gone so f*ck it' mentality -- he's talking about sunk cost fallacy! I learned about that only a couple years ago, myself.
One of my teachers put on Human Centipede in class, dunno what grade I was in at the time but I definitely remember watching it in my old primary/or middle school classroom as a little goober.
"The average human has about 1.4 gallons of blood in their body, and Winnie killed 6 people via exsanguination. How many gallons of blood were drained?"
Funny comment, shame it was stolen by a bot.
Charlie seems like he'd be a pretty dope math teacher
“Okay, class, today we’re gonna be calculating the average moist meter score for all the EA games we’ve revised thus far.”
Hideaway Hideaway from me.
I was in 5th grade and my teacher showed my class a heavily graphic 9/11 documentary. Traumatized me and the whole class. That guy was an idiot. Never liked that teacher.
tf you mean he showed you a video an interesting one at that why u upset cant handwle mild viowence 🥺
Back in my 4th grading we would have this annual event at our elementary school called "Fun-day" where there would be tons of booths, games, activities and stuff. There was an official movie booth where they would deadass show R-rated horror movies like IT and all the elementary students loved watching all those horror movies. Mind you the teachers were approving of them watching horror movies at school which was pretty crazy.
Now all that left is for the kids to calculate the amount of therapy they need after seeing it
People should calculate how much money they waste by going to see therapists . I never needed no therapist and I turned out okay *wipes the drool and blood from my chin*
Teacher was so excited to watch the movie that he put it on during class and ignored the kids pleading until he finally realized it was terrible. Not because of the sad children, but the movie itself
Damn
Also, uhhh... Don't read my username
Meh they should get over it , soft ass children
@@MumbleRapLovesToSuck I red it.
my guess is probably some loud kids who’s guardians let them watch that kind of stuff at home suggested it. I once went over to a person’s house and their grandma was babysitting a bunch of kids no older than 5 and was watching Child’s Play the chucky movie on TV. I asked her “aren’t the kids too young for this? is it ok for them to be watching this?” and she just said it was fine. I could tell that she only said it was ok because she wanted to keep watching it. Some people really just don’t understand how vulnerable kids can be
I remember in my 12th grade English class, we watched the 2006 Beowulf movie. That's a pretty violent movie itself, with some minor nudity (certainly nothing on par with a woman's tits flopping all about in plain view), but 1. We were 12th graders about to go into college, and 2. It was actually part of that lesson because we were actually studying the original story of Beowulf and comparing how the movie differed from the original story.
I can't think of any movies at all that would be shown in a Math class, at least none that aren't for toddlers, that would be relevant for a lesson. What makes me somewhat morbidly curious is, why of all inappropriate movies there are for 4th graders, why did he go with Blood and Honey? part of me can't help but feel like he went with it on purpose because its Winnie the Pooh. What better way to traumatize kids even further than to show them a horrifying version of something part of their childhood, while they're still in their childhood!
My class saw Beowulf in 12th grade English as well but we had read it first and did work on it after
Perhaps some biopic of a famous mathematician for a high school class (although other than Alan Turing, there isn't really a good example of a great mathematician biopic and even Alan Turing is more of a computer scientist).
For fourth grade, there are some PBS math focused series (Cyber chase would be a good example) you could show on a lazy Friday as a reward, but never something like that.
God forbid they see female nipples but male nipples are completely fine right? 😒🙄
@howboutno412 Did you forget those nipples happened to be attached to a gory slasher film as well? Showing violent murder to 4th graders is way worse than nudity.
I remember around my 9th grade Algebra class, my Algebra teacher would play Stand and Deliver after we finished our finals which had some lessons we learned from that year. It had some risque moments but it was a very relatable and good movie.
It just irks me that he didn't even stop the movie if he assumed that the movie was actually about Winnie the Pooh and was PG. I had a fair share of teachers that would play random movies that didn't relate to their class but they were usually PG or PG 13. Guess that really is one way to truly traumatize children!
There was an incident at a high school in my hometown where some teacher/student somehow played Human Centipede in a classroom.
Replying first so bots don’t
@@Pinwheelman.W
Jesus christ
Two years in a row, my Radio/TV class would play Anchorman, and both times my teacher would "accidentally" black out the screen when it was mention Ron pitching a tent.
The first year was decently believable, whereas the second it seemed he was playing it up.
Like, "yeah we know what's going on, just wait it out"
i'm just imagine the teacher just dancint beside the TV and goes ''and then there were 4'' when people die
As a kid my dad turned on gory movies and it honestly did traumatize me for a long time. I can still remember the scenes. So i cant imagine what those kids went through emotionally :(
you really cant imagine it because your story is complete BS
100% fake. also boring. i mean if youre gonna fake it at least make it interesting.
you must suck to talk to.
Based dad
W Dad
You shouldn't be traumatised by gore in films, it's such a ridiculous thing to be sensitive to. It's all just latex prosthetics and pigs blood.
I’m sorry that happened to you 😢 my mom showed me american pie movies before puberty and that messed me up as a kid
This "maths teacher" was probably "getting off" on the fact that the children were scared. Proper sicko, they need to keep an eye on him.....
I'll keep an eye out!!! *gauges out my eye with a spoon & hands it to a child*
not gonna aregue that the teacher is in the wrong here, cause he is, but what fucking hurdles do you have to leap on to go from "teacher showed a movie in class and wouldnt stop it despite being asked to" to "teacher showed a movie to get off on the fact that kids were scared" those arent even close to being the same thing, accusing someone of being a masochistic pedophile because they showed a horror movie in class is a huge fucking leap
@@colossalnate156True, but given the reasons that teachers typically make the news, it wouldn't be surprising, either. It's an unfounded assumption, sure, but I have to admit my mind went to the same place just because the most outrageous things don't seem that unlikely anymore with the way some people behave.
Sounds like a case of the teacher wanting an excuse to get fired.
6:30 That threshold is called sunk cost fallacy lol
Watching this at work on break and of course my boss walks in right at “titties start flopping around” I can’t stop laughing like wtf I thought this was a safe space 😂
Bro this made me laugh so hard 😂
S tier comment
It's a moist space, not a safe space.
2:53
I was at the lunch table and this dude next to me was watching this video, that’s all I hear out of nowhere
didnt happen 100% fake. if im wrong prove it
In the third grade, my teacher would play the most horrifying and disturbing R rated movies all the time. It traumatized me so much I would have breakdowns every day about having to go to school. My teacher labeled me as a 'brat' that was trying to get out of class and would watch me to make sure I was looking at the screen. To this day I still can't watch most horror movies... Seeing this all come out about this fourth grade class, and seeing all the backlash is CRAZY to me, since it was so normalized when I was little and had such a huge and negative impact on me.
As a third grade teacher who has not yet been driven to being an insane psychopath like yours, I'm sending virtual hugs
@@MamaSymphonia I appreciate it 🥹 lots of respect to anyone that's in teaching, mine was definitely just one of the bad apples 😞
Even if it's years later and that teacher is probably not teaching anymore, you should still come out and tell the school and the school board what they did. That teacher should be punished and publicly shamed, even if it's many years after. That's so sick what they did, it's even worse that they got away with it. I'm so sorry for you and the other kids that had to go through that 😢
@@jenniferb.awesome to be honest, I've been thinking about doing that... My mom really wants me to since even now as an adult, it still affects my life. I just don't want to cause any unnecessary extra pain for anyone... 😞 Although, I heard she is still teaching, so the idea that me telling the school board may make it so that no other student of hers has to go through this again. I'm not sure if she is doing it still, since during my third grade year she was getting married and buying a house, so she put on tons of movies since she didn't want to focus on teaching... (still doesn't make it okay), but hopefully now that she's in a different place in her life, it isn't still happening 😢
Kids used to be built different.
"This is what happens when you don't pass your math class!"
My math teacher used to play movies for us all the time, but it was usually stuff like Tommy Boy and Rango. He was pretty awesome.
When I was in Elementary school one of the kids tricked the teacher into letting us watch Baseketball by taking the rating sticker off a G rated movie and overlapping the R rating. Good times.
Imagine being able to make math class even worse
Penguinz0 inspires me... My parents said if i get 50k followers they'd buy me a professional camera for recording begging u guys❤
how is it worse? would love if my math teacher played a horror movie in class
@@infinitehexington Maybe don't show a horror movie to Kids and put something like shrek
@@infinitehexington The lasting trauma it can leave on kids that young. The movie is also pretty terrible, so that doesn't help.
@@Brianna_Q Another movie would definitely been have better
Not sure if anybody else said this, but what you mentioned at 6:30 is known as the sunk-cost fallacy (on Wikipedia, there is a page called Escalation of Commitment of a similar principle).
Something similar happened in my school when I was in 5th grade. Whole school got to watch the dark knight in the auditorium & 1 coward apparently was afraid of the movie & ruined everyone elses experience.
I had an English teacher in high school show a movie that had a grape (remove the g) scene. A very explicit one where the woman was screaming and the man was and watchers were laughing.
I was graped as a child, so I was kind of… out of it for the rest of the day. She called anyone who didn’t want to watch it and left the classroom “sensitive.”
Puh, and they say teachers need to be paid more, hope you're good nowadays
oh tf
pls don't use the word grape it's hard to take seriously use asterisks
@@pikminologueraisin2139 it's replies like these that cause comment wars
@@Constantine_Cvl8 sorry then, i'm oblivious to internet shenaningans
fun fact, the "too fargone so fuck it" threshold Charlie mentions actually has a name in psychology. It's called the Sunk Cost Fallacy, where if you've put a lot of your capitol into something (time, attention, or money), you're more likely to see it through to the end. Like watching a video, getting bored, but staying because there's only 3 more minutes and you've sat there this long already
Learned that from Saul Goodman. Ironically mine were school assignments
Or sticking with a poker hand too much when you already know it’s shit because you’ve already added too much to the pot, so you “might as well keep betting and see it through”
That was actually fun and informative, thanks.
Sounds like me trying to get my novel published after 15+ years of writing it.
I fell into this trap in college. I should have switched majors, but I didn't want to be a "quitter."
to be honest, when i was in fourth grade our teacher had us watch Final Destination 5 and we all loved it (though i still have a fear of bridges to this day) and we all were eager to watch it, but the teacher told us before what it was about and that it was pretty scary, so... I feel like the bad part in this case is the fact he refused to turn it off despite the kids begging him to.
yep
seeing charlie’s smile sparked a gleam in my eye and a slight palpitation of the heart. my grandmother was watching as well and now she can walk again. my goodness, may charlie inspire millions once more
Every child deserves a teacher, but not every teacher deserves to teach.
- Mahatma Ghandi
Penguinz0 inspires me... My parents said if i get 50k followers they'd buy me a professional camera for recording begging u guys❤
He actually said that.
@@OfficerBMTCrunchy petrol?
- the guy who wanted a child to suck his tongue
@@OfficerBMTcheese pizza got ya 👍
I heard this story on the radio! They left out the part that they were 4th graders until the end of the story. I started dying with my family because it was so unbelievable. In Miami too, no less.
You started dying your family? *look of concern*
@@__Listen_to_Solar_Kama_Sutra shit thanks for correcting me 😭
@@WhatIsTomeeDoingNow should've left it that was funny
For a second, I thought that it was a Florida story.
They probably got traumatised because of how bad it is
I remember when I was in 4th grade, there was a week we spent watching movies as classes were almost over. In one they put the Annabelle movie. I left the classroom because I was scared and had nightmares for a week. I've rewatched the movie years later, now I'm 17 and it's no longer scary lol.
This dude clearly wanted to be fired like the teacher in South Park.
I can see this as an episode.
Mr. Garrison plays this movie for the whole class and the boys tell how shitty the movie is and that he traumatized some kids.
@@MikeChhem Why couldn't it have been a good movie like the Thing (1982)m
As if leaving a teaching position is hard. It’s more like getting one removed if they don’t want to is what’s hard
I remember a high school French teacher who decided one day we should learn about French movies. That was a memorable experience.
i see education didnt work for you. thats a shame.
Oui oui
Same with me, we watched the original Beauty and the Beast film in class
martyrs 2008?
my french class in hs we watched i am legend (bootlegged before dvd release legally in english too) i passed french 1&2 bc she liked me so can't complain
I never heard a news anchor who's Mexican. It's always white, German, Polish, Japanese, or another language I don't understand.
Charlie over here giving us the low-down on the sunk-cost fallacy
6:28 charlie redefining the sunk cost phalicy better and more concise than any philosopher could ever dream of
*fallacy, but honestly I think I like the way you spelled it better lol
@@kkondor1081 this is a moistcritikal video after all, i think it’s spelled cerectly given the context;)
The fact that their not instantly thinking about firing him is insane. He purposely traumatized those kids, it's something pretty sadistic to wnat to do to 4th graders. I would beyond passed if I was one of the parents
Grow a set. Everyones so fucking delicate. Its like the parents forget what it was like to be a kid.
They're. Go back and correct it. You fail.
@@habibishapur It's like you forgot what it was like to be a kid.
Bro your intro took me for a spin I thought you were watching me cause I actually am eating spaghetti for breakfast 💀
It's in a math class because their learning counting kills
At least the teacher didn't show "2 Poohs 1 Cup", which is the best Pooh film... But also the worst.
My 7th grade math teacher would give us worksheets and play M*A*S*H and Gilligan's Island on the projector. Tbh it made me love math at the time.