Talk:The Strangest Security Tape I've Ever Seen/@comment-10483109-20140120134742

eep

that's actually really fucking scary

the ending was the nail in the coffin. I at first didn't think the Pasta was that great, especially with the FBI showing up and saying 'we've got another one.' Okay, so what. Another incident of this happens and it's all fixed and nothing bad comes out of it.

Then the ending showed that I was wrong. The FBI didn't help with shit. They just let those people live in a terrifying groundhog day loop. It makes me think that it was less Jeremy's fault, and more of the FBI tampering with space and time and stuff. But who knows.

It also makes me wonder less if Jeremy is a time traveler or warper, or if he's just a ghost. He died and then went back into the past to burn down his family's house, to cause the incident that killed him and also give him his revenge. And then he started messing with all of time itself. But I wonder, what does the laugh have to do with anything? They said he had a creepy laugh. Where does that tie in? It seems to be important somehow.

This 'pasta details a lot of events yet explains so little. That's what makes it so good, because then it gives you a lot of things to think about and even leaves the small details stuck in your brain. Like on repeat. It gives you things to think about that you sort of ponder over and over but never receive an answer for. Why did his face show up on the camera? Why did the security tapes start acting strange then? It suggested more than Jeremy didn't start being the center of a weird phenomena until recently.

That could mean that the diesel disappeared all on one day but caused all of the diesel in the past to run out. That meant the actions of the future was backlashing and having an effect on the past, for the present to witness.

There's so many possibilities that connect at certain roads only to diverge into another. And you're just wondering how it all connects. You can think about it over and over and your thought process will only form a circle of the same ideas, repeated because the answer is never found.

"we've got another one." What's "another one?"

And how do we know it's not the protagonist causing the loop? It started when HE watched the security tapes. Jeremy was the focus point because the protagonist watched the security tapes and drew the conclusion that it had to do with Jeremy. The past changed to adapt to the protagonist's idea of how it should be, causing a paradox. The protagonist is fixated on Jeremy the whole time, even on the tiniest details of his laugh. Jeremy doesn't exist, but only as a focus point for the protagonist to blame his unwanted time warping problems on. He wrote four times the same sentence. Time froze for everyone else but the protagonist, and while everyone else was still, he could start up his car. It only started with the protagonist. He's only confused and can't control his powers.

The first thing the protagonist noted about the security tape's time was 4:03. So everything looped at 03. The same happened with :33.

So why did Jeremy even begin to be a concept? Because Jeremy IS the protagonist, in a way. As he said, everyone knows the story about how the apartment burnt down. So did the protagonist. The protagonist subconsciously couldn't accept that he had these powers, so he brought Jeremy over to the future before his house burnt down. Jeremy technically didn't exist as soon as he was brought to the future. But he did function as a part of the protagonist. He's a red herring that the protagonist invented.

The FBI did help. They contained the loop. They saw this before, and made it so the protagonist and the town were locked in the loop, so it couldn't spread. So how long does the protagonist's time warping powers span to? It stopped a whole city. It didn't have anything to do with the gas station. That was only the setting. It only happened there because that was the protagonist's work space.

His power began at the security tapes because, again, Jeremy was the focus point and the catalyst. It's a paradox. The loop wraps around in circles.

So the protagonist unwittingly locked himself and others into a time loop paradox that they have to endure without their knowledge. The protagonist didn't ask for the powers, that's why he shifted the blame unto Jeremy. Jeremy, at this point, is no more than an imaginary friend that others can see. So it just loops, because the diesel disappeared before it was sold. It loops because Jeremy was taken the time the house burnt down. It loops because the protagonist watched the security camera, which made Jeremy the focus point before Jeremy could have done anything. It loops because the protagonist is the one who made the loop. It was him.

eep

that's actually really fucking scary

the ending was the nail in the coffin. I at first didn't think the Pasta was that great, especially with the FBI showing up and saying 'we've got another one.' Okay, so what. Another incident of this happens and it's all fixed and nothing bad comes out of it.

Then the ending showed that I was wrong. The FBI didn't help with shit. They just let those people live in a terrifying groundhog day loop. It makes me think that it was less Jeremy's fault, and more of the FBI tampering with space and time and stuff. But who knows.

It also makes me wonder less if Jeremy is a time traveler or warper, or if he's just a ghost. He died and then went back into the past to burn down his family's house, to cause the incident that killed him and also give him his revenge. And then he started messing with all of time itself. But I wonder, what does the laugh have to do with anything? They said he had a creepy laugh. Where does that tie in? It seems to be important somehow.

This 'pasta details a lot of events yet explains so little. That's what makes it so good, because then it gives you a lot of things to think about and even leaves the small details stuck in your brain. Like on repeat. It gives you things to think about that you sort of ponder over and over but never receive an answer for. Why did his face show up on the camera? Why did the security tapes start acting strange then? It suggested more than Jeremy didn't start being the center of a weird phenomena until recently.

That could mean that the diesel disappeared all on one day but caused all of the diesel in the past to run out. That meant the actions of the future was backlashing and having an effect on the past, for the present to witness.

There's so many possibilities that connect at certain roads only to diverge into another. And you're just wondering how it all connects. You can think about it over and over and your thought process will only form a circle of the same ideas, repeated because the answer is never found.

"we've got another one." What's "another one?"

And how do we know it's not the protagonist causing the loop? It started when HE watched the security tapes. Jeremy was the focus point because the protagonist watched the security tapes and drew the conclusion that it had to do with Jeremy. The past changed to adapt to the protagonist's idea of how it should be, causing a paradox. The protagonist is fixated on Jeremy the whole time, even on the tiniest details of his laugh. Jeremy doesn't exist, but only as a focus point for the protagonist to blame his unwanted time warping problems on. He wrote four times the same sentence. Time froze for everyone else but the protagonist, and while everyone else was still, he could start up his car. It only started with the protagonist. He's only confused and can't control his powers.

The first thing the protagonist noted about the security tape's time was 4:03. So everything looped at 03. The same happened with :33.

So why did Jeremy even begin to be a concept? Because Jeremy IS the protagonist, in a way. As he said, everyone knows the story about how the apartment burnt down. So did the protagonist. The protagonist subconsciously couldn't accept that he had these powers, so he brought Jeremy over to the future before his house burnt down. Jeremy technically didn't exist as soon as he was brought to the future. But he did function as a part of the protagonist. He's a red herring that the protagonist invented.

The FBI did help. They contained the loop. They saw this before, and made it so the protagonist and the town were locked in the loop, so it couldn't spread. So how long does the protagonist's time warping powers span to? It stopped a whole city. It didn't have anything to do with the gas station. That was only the setting. It only happened there because that was the protagonist's work space.

His power began at the security tapes because, again, Jeremy was the focus point and the catalyst. It's a paradox. The loop wraps around in circles.

So the protagonist unwittingly locked himself and others into a time loop paradox that they have to endure without their knowledge. The protagonist didn't ask for the powers, that's why he shifted the blame unto Jeremy. Jeremy, at this point, is no more than an imaginary friend that others can see. So it just loops, because the diesel disappeared before it was sold. It loops because Jeremy was taken the time the house burnt down. It loops because the protagonist watched the security camera, which made Jeremy the focus point before Jeremy could have done anything. It loops because the protagonist is the one who made the loop. It was him. eep

that's actually really fucking scary

the ending was the nail in the coffin. I at first didn't think the Pasta was that great, especially with the FBI showing up and saying 'we've got another one.' Okay, so what. Another incident of this happens and it's all fixed and nothing bad comes out of it.

Then the ending showed that I was wrong. The FBI didn't help with shit. They just let those people live in a terrifying groundhog day loop. It makes me think that it was less Jeremy's fault, and more of the FBI tampering with space and time and stuff. But who knows.

It also makes me wonder less if Jeremy is a time traveler or warper, or if he's just a ghost. He died and then went back into the past to burn down his family's house, to cause the incident that killed him and also give him his revenge. And then he started messing with all of time itself. But I wonder, what does the laugh have to do with anything? They said he had a creepy laugh. Where does that tie in? It seems to be important somehow.

This 'pasta details a lot of events yet explains so little. That's what makes it so good, because then it gives you a lot of things to think about and even leaves the small details stuck in your brain. Like on repeat. It gives you things to think about that you sort of ponder over and over but never receive an answer for. Why did his face show up on the camera? Why did the security tapes start acting strange then? It suggested more than Jeremy didn't start being the center of a weird phenomena until recently.

That could mean that the diesel disappeared all on one day but caused all of the diesel in the past to run out. That meant the actions of the future was backlashing and having an effect on the past, for the present to witness.

There's so many possibilities that connect at certain roads only to diverge into another. And you're just wondering how it all connects. You can think about it over and over and your thought process will only form a circle of the same ideas, repeated because the answer is never found.

"we've got another one." What's "another one?"

And how do we know it's not the protagonist causing the loop? It started when HE watched the security tapes. Jeremy was the focus point because the protagonist watched the security tapes and drew the conclusion that it had to do with Jeremy. The past changed to adapt to the protagonist's idea of how it should be, causing a paradox. The protagonist is fixated on Jeremy the whole time, even on the tiniest details of his laugh. Jeremy doesn't exist, but only as a focus point for the protagonist to blame his unwanted time warping problems on. He wrote four times the same sentence. Time froze for everyone else but the protagonist, and while everyone else was still, he could start up his car. It only started with the protagonist. He's only confused and can't control his powers.

The first thing the protagonist noted about the security tape's time was 4:03. So everything looped at 03. The same happened with :33.

So why did Jeremy even begin to be a concept? Because Jeremy IS the protagonist, in a way. As he said, everyone knows the story about how the apartment burnt down. So did the protagonist. The protagonist subconsciously couldn't accept that he had these powers, so he brought Jeremy over to the future before his house burnt down. Jeremy technically didn't exist as soon as he was brought to the future. But he did function as a part of the protagonist. He's a red herring that the protagonist invented.

The FBI did help. They contained the loop. They saw this before, and made it so the protagonist and the town were locked in the loop, so it couldn't spread. So how long does the protagonist's time warping powers span to? It stopped a whole city. It didn't have anything to do with the gas station. That was only the setting. It only happened there because that was the protagonist's work space.

His power began at the security tapes because, again, Jeremy was the focus point and the catalyst. It's a paradox. The loop wraps around in circles.

So the protagonist unwittingly locked himself and others into a time loop paradox that they have to endure without their knowledge. The protagonist didn't ask for the powers, that's why he shifted the blame unto Jeremy. Jeremy, at this point, is no more than an imaginary friend that others can see. So it just loops, because the diesel disappeared before it was sold. It loops because Jeremy was taken the time the house burnt down. It loops because the protagonist watched the security camera, which made Jeremy the focus point before Jeremy could have done anything. It loops because the protagonist is the one who made the loop. It was him.

eep

that's actually really fucking scary

the ending was the nail in the coffin. I at first didn't think the Pasta was that great, especially with the FBI showing up and saying 'we've got another one.' Okay, so what. Another incident of this happens and it's all fixed and nothing bad comes out of it.

Then the ending showed that I was wrong. The FBI didn't help with shit. They just let those people live in a terrifying groundhog day loop. It makes me think that it was less Jeremy's fault, and more of the FBI tampering with space and time and stuff. But who knows.

It also makes me wonder less if Jeremy is a time traveler or warper, or if he's just a ghost. He died and then went back into the past to burn down his family's house, to cause the incident that killed him and also give him his revenge. And then he started messing with all of time itself. But I wonder, what does the laugh have to do with anything? They said he had a creepy laugh. Where does that tie in? It seems to be important somehow.

This 'pasta details a lot of events yet explains so little. That's what makes it so good, because then it gives you a lot of things to think about and even leaves the small details stuck in your brain. Like on repeat. It gives you things to think about that you sort of ponder over and over but never receive an answer for. Why did his face show up on the camera? Why did the security tapes start acting strange then? It suggested more than Jeremy didn't start being the center of a weird phenomena until recently.

That could mean that the diesel disappeared all on one day but caused all of the diesel in the past to run out. That meant the actions of the future was backlashing and having an effect on the past, for the present to witness.

There's so many possibilities that connect at certain roads only to diverge into another. And you're just wondering how it all connects. You can think about it over and over and your thought process will only form a circle of the same ideas, repeated because the answer is never found.

"we've got another one." What's "another one?"

And how do we know it's not the protagonist causing the loop? It started when HE watched the security tapes. Jeremy was the focus point because the protagonist watched the security tapes and drew the conclusion that it had to do with Jeremy. The past changed to adapt to the protagonist's idea of how it should be, causing a paradox. The protagonist is fixated on Jeremy the whole time, even on the tiniest details of his laugh. Jeremy doesn't exist, but only as a focus point for the protagonist to blame his unwanted time warping problems on. He wrote four times the same sentence. Time froze for everyone else but the protagonist, and while everyone else was still, he could start up his car. It only started with the protagonist. He's only confused and can't control his powers.

The first thing the protagonist noted about the security tape's time was 4:03. So everything looped at 03. The same happened with :33.

So why did Jeremy even begin to be a concept? Because Jeremy IS the protagonist, in a way. As he said, everyone knows the story about how the apartment burnt down. So did the protagonist. The protagonist subconsciously couldn't accept that he had these powers, so he brought Jeremy over to the future before his house burnt down. Jeremy technically didn't exist as soon as he was brought to the future. But he did function as a part of the protagonist. He's a red herring that the protagonist invented.

The FBI did help. They contained the loop. They saw this before, and made it so the protagonist and the town were locked in the loop, so it couldn't spread. So how long does the protagonist's time warping powers span to? It stopped a whole city. It didn't have anything to do with the gas station. That was only the setting. It only happened there because that was the protagonist's work space.

His power began at the security tapes because, again, Jeremy was the focus point and the catalyst. It's a paradox. The loop wraps around in circles.

So the protagonist unwittingly locked himself and others into a time loop paradox that they have to endure without their knowledge. The protagonist didn't ask for the powers, that's why he shifted the blame unto Jeremy. Jeremy, at this point, is no more than an imaginary friend that others can see. So it just loops, because the diesel disappeared before it was sold. It loops because Jeremy was taken the time the house burnt down. It loops because the protagonist watched the security camera, which made Jeremy the focus point before Jeremy could have done anything. It loops because the protagonist is the one who made the loop. It was him.

eep

that's actually really fucking scary