Welcome to Incels.is - Involuntary Celibate Forum

Welcome! This is a forum for involuntary celibates: people who lack a significant other. Are you lonely and wish you had someone in your life? You're not alone! Join our forum and talk to people just like you.

Blackpill Anyone notice how normies treat sub-5 men as cartoon characters?

NIGGA BANBAN

NIGGA BANBAN

IQcel |⚠️⚠️ This user is a banban nigga⚠️⚠️
★★★★★
Joined
Dec 6, 2025
Posts
8,226
Online time
7d 4h
One common thing I've noticed normies do, especially around YouTube and other normie-adjacent spaces is their obsession of making sub-5 men into some form of characters playing into bigger "arcs" of some story that is their life.

This is something rather common I've noticed, especially in ER documentaries, where he was treated less as a human being and someone who was simply mentally ill due to past trauma, but rather as some exaggerated cartoon villian meant to be used as punching bag for audience to laugh at.

Almost all videos regarding him and his experiences always have this vibe of;

:soy:"Guys ,guys look!! Wow! He's so weird! He's so autistic! What a goofball! No way he thought that would work!!"

As if he's a movie character they're observing from their seats in theaters, rather than a real person living their life.


Every time they talk about him, it's almost as if they treat him as a folklore tale or imaginary cartoon villian who got beaten by the "heroes" of the story, rather than as some mentally ill dude who snapped due to bullying.

Its ironic how they consider and talk about us being immature, while also assigning people to exaggerated roles of "good" (handsome, confident,) and evil (ugly, short, creepy), as if we all aren't human beings who are more than just pure black and white.
 
Last edited:
If normies started to see Eliot as someone who tried to seek help from his father, but was misunderstood and ignored, the narrative of the incel who hates women would begin to crumble, and people would then understand that some people can try as hard as they want, but unfortunately, it's all for nothing.
 
One common thing I've noticed normies do, especially around YouTube and other normie-adjacent spaces is their obsession of making sub-5 men into some form of characters playing into bigger "arcs" of some story that is their life.

This is something rather common I've noticed, especially in ER documentaries, where he was treated less as a human being and someone who was simply mentally ill due to past trauma, but rather as some exaggerated cartoon villian meant to be used as punching bag for audience to laugh at.

Almost all videos regarding him and his experiences always have this vibe of;

:soy:"Guys ,guys look!! Wow! He's so weird! He's so autistic! What a goofball! No way he thought that would work!!"

As if he's a movie character they're observing from their seats in theaters, rather than a real person living their life.


Every time they talk about him, it's almost as if they treat him as a folklore tale or imaginary cartoon villian who got beaten by the "heroes" of the story, rather than as some mentally ill dude who snapped due to bullying.

Its ironic how they consider and talk about us being immature, while also assigning people to exaggerated roles of "good" (handsome, confident,) and evil (ugly, short, creepy), as if we all aren't human beings who are more than just pure black and white.
If they actually learned about what kind of person Elliot was besides the false narrative they have been fed by the media, they would know how much trouble he actually went through in life and was an actual human that deserved help. But no, they only know him as that "Incel" and aren't even open to the idea of him being anything else
 

Similar threads

RobertGarnicasAPedo
Replies
3
Views
460
Chud Norris72
Chud Norris72
RealSchizo
Replies
19
Views
997
Let It Burn
Let It Burn
I_like_pizza
Replies
5
Views
376
I_like_pizza
I_like_pizza
INVERTER
Replies
4
Views
320
INVERTER
INVERTER

Users who are viewing this thread

shape1
shape2
shape3
shape4
shape5
shape6
Back
Top