Plots Explained Badly
Posted By admin On 10/04/22- Jul 2, 2016 - Explore Sierra Blanchard's board 'Badly explained movie plot' on Pinterest. See more ideas about movie plot, explain a film plot badly, movie plots explained badly.
- This film plot explained badly makes it seem like The Silence of the Lambs was some kind of training video for the employees of Ulta. Like this guy isn't some kind of human skin-wearing mad man, he's just an entrepreneur with a new line of hand lotions and skin unguents, featuring powerful botanical extracts and age-defying antioxidants.
Dec 15, 2015 Hint 1: The good guy who was helping the protagonist was the bad guy all along. Hint 2: It’s a live action adaptation. Hint 3: It’s not for kids. Hint 4: For anyone who is a fan of the franchise it’s obvious the “bad guy” wasn’t the bad guy at all. Hint 5: The movie has some light sci-fi elements.
Move over, #NFID18, because there's a new hashtag in town. It's the #ExplainTVShowsBadly hashtag on Twitter, and it's here to change your perspective on TV 140 characters at a time. What's most fun about the trending #ExplainTVShowsBadly hashtag is the creativity Twitter brought to it. Participants used a liberal interpretation of 'badly', which meant they took an interesting approach of explaining a popular show — but, just as often, it led to a beloved series described through an entirely new lens. To scroll through the hashtag is like having your friend describe her new favorite TV show after she's had two cocktails, or asking the same of your mom pretty much ever. From kids' shows to '80s prime time TV, the result of #ExplainTVShowsBadly is a gleeful mash.
It's still happening, so feel free to jump in with your own brief description of television. Or, just sit back, relax, and scroll through dozens of Tweets that may or may not change the way you look at binge-worthy TV. Whether you think they sound so much better or impossibly worse, there's no denying that the #ExplainTVShowsBadly hashtag on Twitter makes your favorite TV shows sound hilariously different. One thing is for sure: You won't watch Sesame Street the same way again.
When A Long-Running CW Show Gets A Makeover
Like, yeah, Supernatural is spooky fun, but we'd absolutely watch that version of it, too.
#ExplainTVShowsBadly Makes 'The Voice' Sound Even More Entertaining
Please let this be in development at NBC. Friday nights, maybe at 8 p.m.? Call us.
This Could Describe Literally Every Crime Show
To be fair, this is a pretty accurate description of every Law & Order episode. And all of their spinoffs. This is basically just Law & Order. It's not even a bad job of explaining it.
Anime Plots Explained Badly
When Children's Shows Get Dark
If Internet memes didn't kind of ruin SpongeBob SquarePants for you, maybe this nihilistic view of Bikini Bottom will.
'Sesame Street' Was Educational Until #ExplainTVShowsBadly
Oh, okay, come on! This is a program for children.
When 'Looney Tunes' Meets Reality
This one's pretty true. Amazon should probably pay royalties to Hanna-Barbera.
When 'Spider-Man' Gets Weird
Justice for Peter Parker, fam. He didn't ask to be a superhero!
Movie Plots Explained Badly Finding Nemo
We'll Take #ExplainTVShowsBadly For $400, Alex
This is Jeopardy! It's weird; we never noticed Alex Trebek's love of overpronouncing until now. Hopefully, this doesn't change anything.
Maybe Ted Mosby Isn't The Guy We Thought
Uh, yeah. But, if you haven't watched it, a lot of other things happen too. How I Met Your Mother is actually really sweet! If you don't think about it like that.
Even Celebrities Like To #ExplainTVShowsBadly
Honestly, Alyssa Milano's Twitter is a joy every day. Of all of the TV shows she could have referenced, she went with Who's The Boss?, and we love her for it.
Remember When Patton Oswalt Was On 'The King Of Queens'?
He sure does!
When Topanga Played #ExplainTVShowsBadly & Won
Well, when you put it that way, Topanga, what was even happening on Boy Meets World?
#ExplainTVShowsBadly will definitely change the way we watch the best TV shows out there. Some of the hashtag's entries are so perfectly vague, it's hard to even tell what they're explaining. Some have put a spin on '90s can't-miss TV that will definitely alter how we watch late-night reruns.
The #ExplainTVShowsBadly hashtag is still going strong. If you need a break from bingeing, but don't really want to leave your TV behind, we heartily recommend a scroll. If you think of any hilariously weird ways to condense a classic series into 140 characters, you can definitely jump in on Twitter.
On Thursday, the literary nerds of Twitter came out in full force to participate in the hilarious hashtag #ExplainABookPlotBadly. It was an exercise in both concision (140 characters, y'all) and gracefully missing the point.
It's easy enough to explain the world's most famous books in 140 characters or less. Try this one: Boy learns he's a wizard, spends teenage years fighting nemesis who killed his parents. But it's a lot harder to explain books in a way that's simultaneously terrible and somewhat recognizable. As with other literary Twitter hashtags, this one brought a breath of fresh — okay, musty, library-scented — air to a a social media platform that's often crowded with outrage and selfies.
Do you know your literary canon well enough to spot the book described by these garbled explanations? Answers below.
- Lonely rich dude stalks careless rich girl who likes his shirts. He dies.
- Everybody has the same name in a small imaginary Colombian village.
- Little girl bullies evil headmistress with a piece of chalk.
- The Great Depression was tough for people.
- This one overweight nerd can't find love and then he finds it with an older woman. He dies.
- Misunderstood wizard dude just wants to kill an annoying kid for like seven books. He dies.
- Chill bro that doesn't care about anything murders someone on a beach because the sun's too hot.
- Nice old man can't get 14-year-old to love him.
- [Twitter Embed: https://twitter.com/darth/statuses/510066073987989504]
- A pirate is obsessed with killing a little kid who can fly.
- This one knight seems cool and all, but he's actually a crazy person.
- An old woman seriously cannot deal with her breakup, so she refuses to put her cake in the refrigerator. For years.
- Old man hangs out on a boat for a really long time.
- Eccentric rich dude writes a fake will aimed at a bunch of people who aren't related to him.
- Some annoying warrior bros fight over this one hot woman.
- Almost everyone in the world dies except for a little boy.
- An old man's daughters are mean to him so he goes crazy.
- Wife shames husband for not being cool enough to murder the king.
- Dude accidentally sleeps with his mother and it's gross.
- A really, really, really long day in Ireland.
- Old guy looks like a teenager. Watches high school girl sleep. Her blood smells good. It's so-o-o romantic.
- A woman is really into color-coding her notebooks.
- [Twitter Embed: https://twitter.com/gmelero/statuses/509904329206026242]
- Cynical teen has a great time in New York just kidding he has a terrible time.
Answers: 1. The Great Gatsby, 2. 100 Years of Solitude, 3. Matilda, 4. The Grapes of Wrath, 5. The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, 6. Harry Potter, 7. The Stranger, 8. Lolita, 9. Green Eggs and Ham, 10. Peter Pan, 11. Don Quixote, 12. Great Expectations, 13. The Old Man and the Sea, 14. The Westing Game, 15. The Iliad, 16. The Road, 17. King Lear, 18. Macbeth, 19. Oedipus Rex, 20. Ulysses, 21. Twilight, 22. The Golden Notebook, 23. Frankenstein, 24. The Catcher in the Rye