I’m impressed. The first dude made it a whole day without being stamped. Unfortunately he wasn’t able to skip dialogue fast enough and didn’t get the world record.
Why "The Jolly Flying Man" fits so perfectly in this scenario? I feel like I've already imagined a similar scene in my head, while this theme was playing. One of my favorite Earthbound songs btw!
Until Disney turned Palpatine into "all the Sith" and were just like "he ultimate big bad no care about tradition he's been working toward for decades, and we need him to save the movie"
@@Garthebarbarian THE FIRST THING YOU SAID WAS BFDI BRO ARE YOU REFERENCING WOODY FROM BATTLE FROM DREAM ISLAND PART BLABLBALABLABLBALABLABABLBBLA ok i will shut.
When the person at the desk gets stamped, the one whispering into their ear looks really shocked every time it happens. They're either scared of getting in trouble, or they're just embarrassed on behalf of the staff member who got stamped. Every customer that gets stamped runs away crying, and every staff member who gets stamped has to maintain professional composure before walking away and apparently losing their job. I keep looping this because I'm fascinated by the level of "bad experience" that stamping is implied to be. No physical harm, but clearly very upsetting. Get out of the stamp line, you guys!!!
Personally I think some of it is implied to be cancel culture. The ones in power can cancel common people with their influence, but then when they are seen acting out, doing something bad (he gets angry at the person talking to him), they are in turn cancelled by their audience, and a new person takes the lead and the spotlight, only for the cycle to repeat when they eventually misstep too
@@solarprogeny6736 that’s actually a really good interpretation. I actually have something to add onto this. Notice the thing in the picture frame. It kinda looks like a chat log thing like Discord. When the person whispers into the person behind the desk’s ear, another line of dialogue/another message is added to the chat log. It’s possibly a representation of how almost everything said and done is posted onto social media and there for everyone to see.
@@solarprogeny6736 Thats exactly what I was thinking, haha. Pretty much looked like cancel culture to me, but in the end i noticed the chat log didn’t post what the one in the chair said (when he was angry) because once he was stamped it was deleted.
It's a discord server and the guy at the desk is a mod. The person who comes and yells at him is the admin asking why he stamped (banned) that one guy. The next guy in line gets that mod stamped (banned and stripped of his mod position) and he becomes the next mod. Thus the cycle continues
this is why mobile youtube needs a loop button >:( Edit: HOLY SHIT THEY FINALLY ADDED LOOP FOR MOBILE LETS GO BOYS WE WON Edit 2: well its a youtube short now so it loops itself smh
It's sort of like a Discord argument.. The guy who stamps a guy in the line got a random guy banned for fun, but the guy who distracts him points his wrong shit and moves on, but the guy writing just makes a bunch of false thins, before that guy gets stamped. Just interpreting that from a TV screen behind him.
so like, the discord mod banned the dude for no reason, the hr fires the mod, hires a new mod, the new mod does the same thing, and the cycle continues.
Still can't get over the fact that the stamp magically switched sides when the other person picked it up then came back to it's original position after putting it back
Plot twist: The person who talks to the stamper is the previous stamper trying to warn them about the infinite loop Edit: Where’d all these likes come from??
84 rewatches later and I realize an animation is allowed to break the laws of physics if it is smooth enough. The stamp changing directions when the traitor grabs it and then the traiter noclipping and contorting while entering his new position.
While you’re busy being mesmerized by the loop, did you realize when the person in the line grabs the stamper, they actually grab it from the stamp arm instead of the handle but then it suddenly corrects itself and then flips when its placed back down? One of those cool animation tricks you don’t notice until you pay close attention.
The fact that the "days without being stamped" conter ticks back up every time the loop repeats implys that whatever planet this takes place on has a horrifically short day night cycle