Something I've never really seen anyone point out is yellow's answer for "opposite of down" is the room Leslie is in. He says they get bigger (big boy room) and bigger (room after that) and on top of it there's a smaller one of all of it (the small house in the room with Leslie)
@@respectable-username I must be looking at the wrong videos then. I've watched lots of reaction videos to this episode and haven't seen anyone mention it. It's probably been mentioned in episode analysis videos if I had to guess, but I don't watch those all too often for any show
@@xmant8842 ohhh ya if you meant IN the reactions, people don't mention it bc they're taking in too much new info to notice the first time. It's definitely a thing people notice their second time through. I was meaning in the comments sections of all the videos about or reacting to this episode and episode 5.
Red guy and duck seem to exist on all three floors existentially. You have to turn up the volume to hear it, but when yellow guy first mounts the stairs you can hear red guy and duck in the kitchen talking about doing experiments on that lump that tried taking duck's place, a clear reference to Stain Edwards (the forever boy). This is important: they know what their big boy versions are doing! When you see Leslie's doll house, we see Stain in the big boy's room. That's because (imho) he wasn't a teacher, but an actual entity like the others. He came out of the make-a-friend box, but in the end couldn't stay in the kitchen with the others. Stain DID murder duck in an attempt to take his place, so Leslie simply picked out a replacement duck from her drawer of ducks and moved Stain to the other room. Then she flipped on the power and restarted them from square one, just as she did after the car trip. Stain never had a chance to permanently take duck's place, because Leslie's pulling the strings. At first I felt bad for Stain, because it's a terrible end for a forever boy who wanted to go on adventures, learn about life and maybe fall in love. But then, he DID kill duck, and that was even after being accepted to the family, so the experiments are his eternal punishment for murder. An important key to deciphering this episode is to look up Plato's allegory of the cave. Duck's shredder song interlude *I think* is a parody of Queen's Bohemian Rhapsody, which is a wonderfully entertaining load of pompous rubbish (and I mean that in a good way).
The order of items being displayed upon entering Leslie's room seem to tell the story. Cuddle Dollops (family), shovel (death), batteries (electricity- brought yellow guy back). Seems to really sum the theory up!
For an extra bit of mind-fuckery, rewatch that scene from the beginning where Yellow Guy is giving his crossword answer and the theme song from episode 5 and see if he makes any more sense
Something I've never really seen anyone point out is yellow's answer for "opposite of down" is the room Leslie is in. He says they get bigger (big boy room) and bigger (room after that) and on top of it there's a smaller one of all of it (the small house in the room with Leslie)
If you've never seen someone pick up on that then you're not looking hard enough bc it's on every video relating to this episode
@@respectable-username I must be looking at the wrong videos then. I've watched lots of reaction videos to this episode and haven't seen anyone mention it. It's probably been mentioned in episode analysis videos if I had to guess, but I don't watch those all too often for any show
@@xmant8842 ohhh ya if you meant IN the reactions, people don't mention it bc they're taking in too much new info to notice the first time. It's definitely a thing people notice their second time through. I was meaning in the comments sections of all the videos about or reacting to this episode and episode 5.
Red guy and duck seem to exist on all three floors existentially. You have to turn up the volume to hear it, but when yellow guy first mounts the stairs you can hear red guy and duck in the kitchen talking about doing experiments on that lump that tried taking duck's place, a clear reference to Stain Edwards (the forever boy). This is important: they know what their big boy versions are doing!
When you see Leslie's doll house, we see Stain in the big boy's room. That's because (imho) he wasn't a teacher, but an actual entity like the others. He came out of the make-a-friend box, but in the end couldn't stay in the kitchen with the others. Stain DID murder duck in an attempt to take his place, so Leslie simply picked out a replacement duck from her drawer of ducks and moved Stain to the other room. Then she flipped on the power and restarted them from square one, just as she did after the car trip. Stain never had a chance to permanently take duck's place, because Leslie's pulling the strings.
At first I felt bad for Stain, because it's a terrible end for a forever boy who wanted to go on adventures, learn about life and maybe fall in love. But then, he DID kill duck, and that was even after being accepted to the family, so the experiments are his eternal punishment for murder.
An important key to deciphering this episode is to look up Plato's allegory of the cave.
Duck's shredder song interlude *I think* is a parody of Queen's Bohemian Rhapsody, which is a wonderfully entertaining load of pompous rubbish (and I mean that in a good way).
The order of items being displayed upon entering Leslie's room seem to tell the story. Cuddle Dollops (family), shovel (death), batteries (electricity- brought yellow guy back). Seems to really sum the theory up!
There's another level of the house, above Leslie, that Yellow doesn't see. What is above Leslie??
I just realized that at 17:43 duck’s face is on the urn that red guy picks up
Your theories about this series is speaking to me... I like where your head is at.
For an extra bit of mind-fuckery, rewatch that scene from the beginning where Yellow Guy is giving his crossword answer and the theme song from episode 5 and see if he makes any more sense
Also The June 20 Thing Is Something You'll Know When You Watch Season 1
You Literally Ignored Clay Hill, It Was A Reference To The Don't Hug Me I'm Scared Tv Pilot (Season 2)
Hug him he is Scared
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8:13 w o t b o u t m y ( p e r s o n a l ) S H R E D D A H ? !