![]() ![]() The key lies saying that's what the strangers want Duck to think. The key tells Duck that nothing is safe, but Duck notices that it was a puppy inside. He smacks it into a bowl of acid, revealing it was a puppy who had just been killed. The key seems excited, but detects a "security alert" in the present. Yellow Guy is happy that the town is safe, and is excited to open his birthday present. Red Guy leaves, while Duck is now in the mayor's office after locking the town. While Duck is appointed mayor, Red Guy finds the mayor's footsteps leading into the forest. Duck agrees, and the townspeople decide he should become the new mayor. The key says he's the key to the city, and starts singing a song about keeping the town secure from strangers. ![]() ![]() He takes the key out of his pocket and it becomes alive. Duck suddenly hears a voice saying that the town needs to be secure. Yellow Guy wonders who will sing his part of the song, Duck wonders who's gonna look after the town and Red Guy wonders who's going to find the mayor. Duck looks inside and discovers a key on the floor, and the title "DON'T HUG ME I'M SCARED" appears.Īt the house, the trio watch the news about the Mayor being gone on TV. All the townspeople go and greet the mayor but only discover that he's missing. Mrs Grenald gives Yellow a pie filled with organs, but Red stops Yellow before he can eat it. Duck and Red Guy enter saying that they sing the song every morning in their funny house. The door opens and Yellow Guy greets the audience singing that today is his birthday and he's wearing a ribbon that says "38 TODAY". The episode opens with the door to the house with a colorful background and the all the YouTube episodes playing at high speed. Ultimately, the creators decided not to pursue the concept, and the pilot was scrapped. the episode's focus on government surveillance) was not in line with what they were trying to do, and ran the risk of dating the series when compared to the timelessness of the original shorts. They also found that its focus on "current affairs" (i.e. It either intrigued people to see more or scarred them for life and had them make sure to avoid seeing anything remotely like it ever again.Although this pilot helped sell the show, delays in production caused by Super Deluxe going under and later the COVID-19 pandemic led series creators Becky Sloan, Joe Pelling, and Baker Terry to rethink the concept: they found that the Clayhill setting, which drew some comparisons to South Park, came at the cost of the claustrophobia of the original shorts (a re-evaluation prompted by the pandemic's lockdown). The high production level, attention to detail, intriguing storyline, and simultaneous use of comedy and horror gives it a truly unique essence, and the first time that door to insanity is cracked really is the defining moment. This change from "odd" to "what on earth was that?" is what makes DHMIS so popular on the internet. The trio seems happy to play along and sing with the notebook, but truly out of nowhere, the scene goes awry and is filled with unsettling dancing, a change from puppets to humans in costumes, off-beat music, twisted arts and crafts, and as always, haunting screams. As the trio sits in a lovely Pee-wee's Playhouse looking house set, a cute notebook appears and begins to sing about creativity. Episode 1's sudden twist to nastiness is what put the show on people's radars. ![]()
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