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  2. Jan 18, 2018 · No-one involved in creating the Slender Man mythology was responsible for their deeds. But where a sense of responsibility does come into play is in terms of Sony’s new movie.

    • David Houghton
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  3. Jan 11, 2017 · Like Bigfoot, the Loch Ness monster, or the chupacabra, the Slender Man is total fiction, an internet meme blurred by curious minds into something resembling reality.

    • Dave Gonzales
  4. Jan 20, 2017 · Published Jan. 20, 2017. Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. Claim: There is a faceless, semi-human monster called Slenderman who stands eight feet tall, has tentacles for arms, stalks and eats...

  5. Slender Man is real, a digital tulpa who has burrowed his way into the psychology of a certain sect of internet users, and achieved a level of godliness that can provoke violence in the real...

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    • Explained!

    By Arnold T. Blumberg

    Posted: Aug 8, 2018 5:42 pm

    Who’s that guy standing way off in the distance, just behind that tree? Why, it’s the Slenderman, the modern monster that has captured the attention of everyone from posters on Reddit and Deviant Art to local and national news reporters all across America. And now, the Slenderman movie is about to arrive.

    The Slenderman may not be a true folk figure in the traditional sense, but in an era of internet memes, he definitely qualifies as an embodiment of terror deliberately tailored for the iPhone generation, and folklore scholars tend to agree. But just who is the urban legend known as Slenderman? Read on... if you dare!

    The Slenderman is just that – a nondescript (he has no discernible features, but his face occasionally takes different forms) pale figure in a black suit with preternaturally elongated limbs (or even tentacles). His primary targets are children, although all human beings are potentially prone to being traumatized by his very presence. Seeking to know more about him often draws his unwanted attention, and he can teleport directly to your location with little to no warning. Lurking in forests or other lonely, abandoned places, his proximity can trigger increasing disorientation, paranoid feelings, insanity, and the occasional nosebleeds. Attempting to record him on video or audio is usually futile.

    In keeping with the meme origins of the character (see below), his story has been built by multiple authors since his first conception; many encountered him for the first time via the found footage “Marble Hornets” video series posted on YouTube, which drew over 50 million views and corralled a quarter million subscribers. The series also established the Slenderman symbol, which has since turned up in many other stories featuring the character. But the Slenderman’s reign of terror all began with one man, and a simple little Internet competition to come up with something new and disturbing…

    The sinister saga of Slenderman began on June 8, 2009, when his creator, Eric “Victor Surge” Knudsen, posted some Photoshopped images of the creature on the “Something Awful” Internet forum as part of a contest to come up with original “paranormal” pictures. Unlike other entrants, Knudsen captioned his pictures with eerie snippets of text that suggested a larger story involving abducted children that may even have been pressed into service to murder at the behest of the Slenderman. Other posters started shaping a backstory for the character almost immediately, and Slenderman soon became one of the most popular viral “creepypasta” (basically, easily copy-and-pasted short horror stories that can be shared online) tales shared all across the web as a crowd-sourced meme of modern horror.

    The Slenderman, an amalgam of countless other characters that populate horror literature and entertainment, draws on elements of Lovecraftian madness, stories of the mysterious Men in Black and Greys associated with UFO lore, games like Silent Hill and Resident Evil, and the works of Stephen King and William S. Burroughs. Knudsen has also acknowledged the influence of the Tall Man from the 1979 Don Coscarelli film, Phantasm, and the legend of the Mothman, while the similarities to creatures like the Gentlemen in Buffy the Vampire Slayer and the Charlton/DC Comics character the Question are also undeniable (notably, Knudsen’s pseudonym “Victor Surge” is very reminiscent of the Question’s alter ego, Victor Sage).

    Sadly, the Slenderman’s biggest claim to fame may be that he found himself at the center of a real-life tragedy when two 12-year-old girls living in Wisconsin attacked a classmate on May 31, 2014, and stabbed her 19 times. The “Waukesha Stabbing” was an attempt by the two girls, as they later told police, to please the Slenderman and protect their families from his wrath (the “Marble Hornets” series was the first to establish the notion that human “proxies” could serve the Slenderman with heinous acts). Their intended victim survived the attack, but the story of the horrific assault carried the story of the Slenderman to every major news outlet, and even led to Knudsen himself issuing a brief statement in which he refused to discuss the incident further beyond offering his sympathies. The entire tale has since been covered by HBO in the documentary, Beware the Slenderman.

    Since the “Waukesha Stabbing,” other Slenderman-related crimes have been reported, including a June 2014 stabbing of a mother by her own 13-year-old daughter, a September 2014 incident in which a 14-year-old girl set fire to her family’s house, and a rash of 2015 suicide attempts at the Indian reservation at Pine Ridge, in which the character was frequently named as a primary inspiration, resembling the “suicide spirit” that was part of their traditions.

    Despite these terrible stories – or perhaps at least in part because of them – Slenderman quickly captured the imagination and slipped his way into pop culture through games, television, music, and much more. Aside from the Screen Gems Slenderman movie, references to the dapper denizen of the dark have popped up in Minecraft and other games, while ...

    Find Arnold T. Blumberg on Twitter at @DoctoroftheDead.

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  6. Aug 29, 2018 · We might be creating the Slender Man, making him real. The Toronto Society for Psychical Research did this with an entity called “Philip” in the mid-1970s. There was a book written about it, called Conjuring Up Philip .

  7. Aug 8, 2018 · While Marble Hornets is pretty indisputably the most popular and influential YouTube-based series and ARG within the Slender Man mythos, an important fact to remember is that technically the Slender Man isn't actually in it. Sure, yes, there is a terrifying long, tall, no-face monster in a business suit who pops up in the background and does ...

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