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This is a question Creepy!

Smash Monkey asks: "what's the creepiest thing you've seen, heard or felt? What has sent shivers running up your spine and skidmarks running up your undercrackers? Tell us, we'll make it all better"

(, Thu 7 Apr 2011, 13:57)
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Paedo by proxy and others.
All those books, with their soft-focus white jackets of a small tearful child. The stories are harrowing, horrifying tales of abuse, usually with some life-affirming ending. I can see why some survivors of such things would want to get a message out, but it's a bit past that now, isn't it? It seems to have become some sort of porn, greedily devoured by people who just can't seem to get enough of reading about the tings that happened to these people. The sheer number of such books means there must be a huge market for them. Fuck, Tesco even had a whole section devoted to them at one point.
It's not just the subject of these books that creeps me out, it's the industry that's formed around it and the people who lap it up.
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 14:43, 47 replies)
I agree
I cannot understand why people would read this stuff. I'm sure that half of them must be made up.
The fact that the section in Waterstones is called 'Tragic Life Stories' is just plain wrong.
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 14:46, closed)
Sandy got it right with 'misery porn'

(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 14:57, closed)
many women like reading misery porn
there's magazines dedicated to it.

"my boyfriend chopped my leg off an ate it" that sort of thing.
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 14:48, closed)
*subscribes

(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 14:49, closed)
Yep
www.takeaweirdbreak.com/
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 15:01, closed)
Oh wow.
Oh freaking wow.
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 15:15, closed)
I'll tell you what's worse.
The 'supernatural romance' section of Waterstones.
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 14:50, closed)
I'd love to say I've left it all behind by moving across the world,
But sadly the cheap bookshop here is full of it. I always involuntarily scowl at those books while making my way to the much-more-wholesome military history section.
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 14:55, closed)
I do hope you march, quick time, and stamp your feet when you arrive.

(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 14:59, closed)
No, but when the shop assistant asks me to pay,
I stare moodily into the middle distance with narrowed eyes for a few seconds, snap out of it and say "sorry, I was back there for a minute".
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 15:09, closed)
they don't know man

(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 15:12, closed)
How many Vietnam War veterans does it take to screw in a lightbulb?
You don't know? OF COURSE YOU DON'T FUCKING KNOW! YOU WEREN'T THERE, MAN!
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 15:16, closed)
I had no idea things had got this bad
a whole section? I don't think I understand - is this like Twilight and various bookalikes? Or is it some new genre I've not yet encountered of "I'm in love with my poltergeist" type books?
Or maybe - "fucking with angels - how to seduce the Lord's heavenly choir"

Hey - i like that. Especially chapter 12: dogging with angels.
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 15:12, closed)
Viz recently had a letter from Edna Pupice or whatever saying that
They should surround the grand master paintings in the Tate with policemen, and anyone caught looking at the naked cherubs should be immediately arrested for paedophilia.
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 15:20, closed)
Well, I agree
those naked, doe-eyed flirty little cherubs are enough to drive anyone to paedophilia and should be banned immediately. As should Jesus - he's been giving me come-on eyes lately and I think it's turning me gay.

That's why images of Muhammad are banned, you know.
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 15:37, closed)
coz he's a Homo?

(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 15:38, closed)
Of course not. I'd never say anything like that on a public forum, not even in jest
I'm just saying that Muhammad has this pouty look that he does that instantly turns other men into homosexuals, and therefore all his followers are gay - that's all.
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 15:48, closed)
In the Philadelphia Museum of Art
There's a painting of dozens of nude pre-pubescent children just standing around a forest stream all facing towards the viewer. I can't remember who the artist was now, but I do remember that he was Belgian. "Figures" I thought to myself.
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 16:21, closed)
Supernatural romance
is books like Twilight. I think the main characters are typically a human woman and a man who's a vampire, werewolf etc.

Buffy fans seem to be generally convinced that Buffy has nothing to do with this sort of silliness.
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 15:31, closed)
indeed
its not like she ever shagged either Angel or Spike.
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 15:48, closed)
Didn't it start with
"A Child Called It"? Then a couple more came out, then the market was flooded and then people starting writing fictional ones, which is just sick because you're just cashing on other people's tragedy.
The book section Tesco was full of them. Those, and books on a theme by Dan Brown. Holy orders, Templars, crusades secrets etc. And the covers all look the same.
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 14:52, closed)
The fictional ones are the worst.
Well, maybe one under the ones that are fictional but weren't sold as such.
Private Eye have a wonderful segment on bookalikes.
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 14:56, closed)
Longer than that.
Flowers in the Attic. That's got it all - kidnap, incest, physical & mental abuse and murrdurr.
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 15:08, closed)
Have you ever seen a picture of the author?
She looks exactly like someone who'd write a book like that.
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 15:32, closed)
Ooo you've given me an idea for a story!

(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 15:11, closed)
*click*
Yes. Very creepy.
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 14:58, closed)
The worst thing about these sexual abuse stories
is the way that they're putting honest writers of biographies about their terrible Irish childhood out of business.
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 15:27, closed)
Hahahaha Angela's Ashes FTW
Da wurst ting in da werld is ter be Oirish. But werse dan been Oirish, is to be poor Oirish. But werse dan been poor Oirish is been a poor Oirish woman. But werse dan been a poor Oirish Woman is been a poor Oirish Catlick woman ...
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 15:31, closed)
For some
reason I just read your post Vag with a South African accent.
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 15:34, closed)
You know what they say about forrins.
All the same.
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 15:36, closed)
coming over here
stealing our sausages.
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 15:39, closed)
Yeah
I had the CEO of apple bust into my house the other day and nick my can of Mr Sheen...

B'stard.
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 16:56, closed)
sausages?

(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 15:36, closed)
Begorrah

(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 15:37, closed)
hahahahahahah

Now do a comedy black man...

or a pakistani....just remember to say 'bud bud bud' and move your head about...
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 18:30, closed)
Ah, come on now
he was making a point about the craven, happily conformist, stereotype-reinforcing-nature of the whole genre, so he was.
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 0:17, closed)
*facepalm*

(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 9:37, closed)
I
didn't think you were into lazy stereotypes, or is it just the Welsh you're touchy about?
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 9:54, closed)
I'm not. Think Alf Garnett and Ali G.
You clearly haven't watched or read AA. It's full of the self-effacing irony Irish writers are famous for. See the above opening sentence. The body count among the children alone goes through the roof in the first ten minutes.

But do feel free to lecture me on it - I am English, after all.

"Oi've heard Father Michael does a noice lang mass - he can go on for hours! Especially now after his stroke."

EDIT: Sorry - just for clarity - that last quote is from Father Ted. Another superb bit of self-effacing comedy from Ireland.
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 10:05, closed)
did he do an 'Irvine Welsh'?

The lazy cunt....phonetic books are shit.
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 10:16, closed)
No - the phoeticism was mine, in trying to recreate the original aural experience from the fillum.
Phoetic books are shit I agree - pretentious and entirely unnecessary.
(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 10:25, closed)
^this^

(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 11:53, closed)
very good

(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 15:33, closed)
If you're sick of that whole racket, try this.
www.amazon.co.uk/My-Godawful-Life-Abandoned-Betrayed/dp/0752226738/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1302717313&sr=8-1
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 18:56, closed)
That looks rather good.

(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 0:08, closed)
As long as people buy them
. . people will publish them
(, Wed 13 Apr 2011, 23:28, closed)
They're known as misery memoirs in the trade

(, Thu 14 Apr 2011, 10:33, closed)

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