Wendigoon Thread

Honestly I feel like he would have a kick out of diving into Smile Guide, despite it being in Polish.
1662226261108.png
Now that I think about it, this series was way ahead of it's time. First video appeared in 2013 and the series was only known in Poland. It was analog horror before analog horror was even a thing, and it only became popular in the West after the series has ended, and when the West found interest in analog horror.
 
As someone who find this sort of stuff fascinating and has actually delved deep into higher criticism and whatnot, it's clear neither of the doofuses have any idea what they're talking about. But also, Wendigoon himself is just sort of annoying. He is reasonably composed in his regular videos, but the moment he has to go off-script he really comes across as a Joe Rogan "woah, dude!" sort of guy.
Couldn't have said it better myself. I got really into theology and apologetics when I was in my early-mid 20s too; I thought I was an amateur philosopher with revolutionary ideas, but the thing about faith is that it must just be what it is, or it isn't faith anymore.

I'm not even sure if I'm a Christian at this point in my life, but if I were to be one, there is little sense or value in trying to rectify science with faith. I knew a professor during my younger years who had written a book published by one of those Christian publishers about how evolution was all a lie, and even at my young age, I knew it was cherry-picked strawmanning, full of things like the Watchmaker Analogy, which has some very convincing counter-arguments by some very accomplished atheists. It was a bad book and everyone was treating him like he was the anti-Dawkins; it drove me fucking nuts.

Same kind of energy in these videos--to put effort into explaining the inexplicable is an arrogance that is typically the domain of young men, so I can forgive this guy being a total doofus, but I don't have the patience to listen to it either.

He'd be really good at writing those little plot summaries in the TV guide, though.
 
Wendigoon's moment to talk about the hands got to me, like oh God.

WW1 for a lot of people was really an eye opening thing about just how nasty war is. Losing around 500,000 18-19 year old men for 5 miles of land.

For me the part about the mute actor playing the dying French soldier was heavy, there you are with a man you can't even speak with after you mortally wounded him.

I also thought it was interesting to learn that they had actual WW1 vets in the movie as extras and providing ideas to the director, like the German soldier who told him about the French soldier that died with his hands on the barbed wire.
 
After watching his videos again, I think his biggest strength is how different his approach is compared to his contemporaries. Compared to people like Nexpo or Barely Sociable that try to make it all mysterious all eerie, or those dime a dozen true crime channels with their almost obssesive approach, Wendigoon is like having a friend telling you about some weird story. You always have that one friend in your circle, and Wendigoon is just like that one friend
Wendigoon is a good egg, he's like a mix of Spoony during his D&D vlog era and Count Dankula's Mad Lads. He'll never give us the ranting, swearing screams the Spoony did but he'll probably never scam his fans or become chronically depressed either.
Is wendigoon gay? I know he has a "girlfriend" but he gives out some serious "Ilovecum" vibes.
Wendigoon is a Christian, and not the fake kind. Even if his brain were wired to be gay, he would in all likelihood refuse to touch another man.
 
Last edited:
New Video
Sat through the whole fucking video. The main character/author should've fucked off to a Buddhist temple since he was detached to the human experience anyway, or so he alleges. He presupposes that everyone is putting on a charade and out to get him or waiting for him to fuck up so they can. A story of paranoia that manifests as a go-along to get-along disposition to the point of joining people on their suicide attempts. Ultimately just a guy without a purpose or a fuck to give.

Not even as particularly depressing as it's sold as. The main character came and went like an unenthusiastic parade.
 
Think the true horror is the fact that everyone else around him didn't realize he truly thought that way and still believed he wasn't a bad person to the end, that it was all because of his father. This is kinda interesting because the Japanese have that "sins of the father's" takeaway on family matters, but apparently Dazai was so different and far removed from his family name that it made some folks wonder if his father, being a politician and all, drove his son down that kind of path, not taking it into account that was still a choice Dazai made even though he was afraid of telling people "no".

It's "dark" in a sense that it's legit depressing with no real happy ending because a real person lived and died with that kind of mindset, which is a fascinating psychological case study. We joke about the NPC meme all the time, especially when the media freaked out about it as hard as they did, but there's some truth to that. Don't know if we could really label Dazai as an NPC like that, but there was something really wrong with him that no one picked up on, and all we have is his semi-autobiography to go by. So could we categorize him as "no longer human", something akin to an alien or a monster, or was he just such a super broken human that he couldn't personally identify as one?

Had no idea about what the book was about going into the video. I've seen the manga around in Barnes & Noble and just thought it was like a Frankenstein-inspired novel-length story Junji Ito had worked on in between his short stories, though I had forgotten Ito already did his own adaptation of Frankenstein.

Anyway, I liked the video. Watched it in a sitting last night, although the whole time I was going "If Wendigoon thinks this is the most depressing thing he's read, I hope he reads Oyasumi Punpun." Now I'm actually not sure which story makes you want to die more.
 
New Video
Pretty meh, even within the realm of real life stories it was very vanilla - just psycho 101, but without the determination to get on top at all costs, or the misunderstanding of society to do truly heinous shit. It reminded me of the "don't go full retard" joke, only in this case it's a psycho that has a tragic past and just wants to find a depressed GF to understand him.
 
Think the true horror is the fact that everyone else around him didn't realize he truly thought that way and still believed he wasn't a bad person to the end, that it was all because of his father. This is kinda interesting because the Japanese have that "sins of the father's" takeaway on family matters, but apparently Dazai was so different and far removed from his family name that it made some folks wonder if his father, being a politician and all, drove his son down that kind of path, not taking it into account that was still a choice Dazai made even though he was afraid of telling people "no".

It's "dark" in a sense that it's legit depressing with no real happy ending because a real person lived and died with that kind of mindset, which is a fascinating psychological case study. We joke about the NPC meme all the time, especially when the media freaked out about it as hard as they did, but there's some truth to that. Don't know if we could really label Dazai as an NPC like that, but there was something really wrong with him that no one picked up on, and all we have is his semi-autobiography to go by. So could we categorize him as "no longer human", something akin to an alien or a monster, or was he just such a super broken human that he couldn't personally identify as one?

Had no idea about what the book was about going into the video. I've seen the manga around in Barnes & Noble and just thought it was like a Frankenstein-inspired novel-length story Junji Ito had worked on in between his short stories, though I had forgotten Ito already did his own adaptation of Frankenstein.

Anyway, I liked the video. Watched it in a sitting last night, although the whole time I was going "If Wendigoon thinks this is the most depressing thing he's read, I hope he reads Oyasumi Punpun." Now I'm actually not sure which story makes you want to die more.
A story about a guy who was checked out from the start doesn't really make me depressed.
 
Back