Squid Game

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  • #246941

    I am NOT a China basher. This is just on topic. This guy says China is frustrated by the success of Korean cinema? Korean dramas are triggering Chinese officials, according to this news caster. Liu Cixin books have supposedly been filmed but not released.

    China has two versions of the hit Netflix series Squid Game—its real-life version and its knockoff version that tries to cover up its real-life version. Watch this episode of China Uncensored for more on the South Korean drama that’s breaking Netflix viewership records, how the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is reacting, and how the CCP’s practice of killing prisoners of conscience for their organs is coming back to haunt it.

     

    comments:

    Someone please add a square and triangle to the Olympic rings and write beneath it 2022 Beijing Squid Games “We have organ harvesting”.

     

    #246949

    Schools freaking out over ‘Squid Game’
    The Podcast of the Lotus Eaters

    Sargon. the other day, Salty Cracker said one of his videos went viral on Sargon’s Discord. I am not on it, but found it interesting.

    There are comparisons to Saw, or Battle Royale? Or Running Man, but this show did tweek and twist it. To make it about money and debt and gambling.

    comments:

    South-Korea is what America was like in the 80’s where the left and right could collaborate constructively to produce meaningful and important culture. You would never get that in the US now, all we can hope for now is more movies to come out of Korea. Looks like it really pissed of the CCP as well which is always a good thing.

    #247361

    Scam? It was all a scam?

    I posted about this in a link from Yahoo, so it’s Yahoo making me look bad. Huge apologies for even talking about it!!!

     

    ‘Squid Game’ Crypto-Scam Exposed, COIN Crashes 100% After Explosive Gains
    by Tyler Durden
    Monday, Nov 01, 2021 – 01:33 PM

    Update: Following up on what we detailed yesterday, CoinMarketCap issued an even firmer warning:

    “We have received multiple reports that the website and socials are no longer functional & the users are not able to sell this token in Pancakeswap.

    Please do your own due diligence and exercise extreme caution.

    This project, while clearly inspired by the Netflix show of the same name, is not affiliated with the official IP. ”

    The Squid Game token rocketed in price from around 1 cent on Tuesday to trade around $38 late Sunday, according to CoinMarketCap data. It then stepped up to around $90 early Monday, then spiked to just above $2,861 before falling to $0.003467 at 10 a.m. ET.

    “The scam has completed its cycle, and the price has just dropped significantly,” Bobby Ong, co-founder at CoinGecko, told Insider.

    “Website and social media accounts being deleted is a very obvious sign that it is a scam.”

    CoinMarketCap reports that SQUID’s inflexible tokenomics has caused many investors to lose a lot of money.

    Describing Monday’s brutal crash, one SQUID holder told CoinMarketCap:

    “The price was multiplying at an abnormal level. And as I was staring at my computer screen, I watched SQUID fall down in a matter of minutes. There was no way to withdraw my funds intact.”

    They said they were drawn in by news outlets that gave attention to SQUID — and that this additional marketing made them feel that the project was genuine:

    “I guess this will serve as a valuable lesson for me to not just jump into meme coins … I am not blaming anyone except myself, but I think there must be some mechanism to avoid this in the future, and for news outlets to stop giving attention to these scammer type tokens.”

    Others describe how their $57 investment surged to $14,000 — and their frustration at being unable to sell their token.

    Another victim told CoinMarketCap “I lost all of what I have in this project.” He had bought 5,000 SQUID at $1 apiece.

    “I don’t trust in them anymore,” he added.

    Crypto investors are regularly encouraged to scrutinize a project’s website to see whether information about the founders is prominently displayed.

    Squid Game’s website did this — naming David Kanny as CEO. He was described as a University of California Irvine alum who had five years’ experience at Netflix, but no LinkedIn profile exists. Searches for other named executives — Mabel Jah, Kevin Sam, Christian Abbigail, Daniel Jolia and Lawrence Dan — also drew blanks on Google.

    In the Netflix show, Squid Game depicts characters who are willing to put their lives on the line for a better financial future.

    But for those who put their money on the line by investing in SQUID, any hope of a better financial future has now been lost in the blink of an eye.

    * * *

    The hit Netflix series “Squid Game” has inspired a new cryptocurrency, which saw its value skyrocket by 40,000% this week in just a handful of trading days.

    As of 0745 ET Friday, the “Squid Game” token, aka “SQUID”, stood at $5.41, up from $0.01235 when it started trading on Tuesday, according to data from Coin Market Cap.

    The relatively obscure crypto is up more than 200% in the past 24 hours and it now commands a market capitalization of more than $419 million.

    While the rapid spike in price may tempt more traders into the coin, CoinMarketCap warned on its site that some people appear to not be able to sell the coin once they buy it.

    “We have received multiple reports that the users are not able to sell this token in Pancakeswap. Please exercise caution while trading!” CoinMarketCap warns. Pancakeswap is a popular decentralized cryptocurrency exchange.

    The inability to sell the coins could be tied to an “anti-dumping mechanism” that the creators of the coin described in a white paper associated with the cryptocurrency.

    Like the South Korean show “Squid Game” in which 456 deeply indebted people compete in deadly children’s games for a grand prize of more than $38MM, the Squid token was launched as a way to buy into the Squid Game project, a crypto play-to-earn platform that will culminate with an online in a squid-game-esque tournament next month.

    The online tournament will mimic the six rounds of games featured in the hit series, but, as the white paper says, “we do not provide deadly consequences.”

    “Your experience will only reflect on the joy of winning rewards and sorrow of losing money when the game failed,” the white paper says.

    Another difference is that the online tournament will not cap the reward money for winning nor will there be a maximum number of players.

    Contestants will have to fork over a preset amount of the SQUID token in order to compete in each round of the tournament. At the crypto’s current price, the fee for the final round of the tournament, for example, stands at roughly $81,000.

    Entry fees from each of the rounds are split between developers, who said they’ll take 10%, and the reward pool, where the remaining 90% of the coins will be deposited.

    At the crypto’s current price, the fee for the final round of the tournament, for example, stands at roughly $81,000.

    And throughout the tournament, players will have the opportunity to earn non-fungible tokens, or NFTs, by winning rounds. The NFTs also appear to be for sale on the behind the token’s website, and they can be traded among contestants.

    Throughout the game, users will also earn Marbles Tokens, which is another reference to the show. Those tokens will allow users to eventually sell their SQUID coins and cash in, according to the white paper.

    Of course, while the international crypto community has embraced the game, the NYC school system sees the trend as a liability, and has banned all students from dressing up s characters from the show for halloweem

    #247421

    AAPWcJS

    #247480

    Quid is a casual term for money in Britain as there is ‘bucks for dollars’ in US. • You can say one Quid or 1000 Quid and all you have to do is to replace pounds with Quid. ‘Quid,’ on the other hand, is just the slang term for ‘pound.’ ‘Pound’ comes from the Latin word ‘Libra’ the currency of ancient Rome. ‘Quid’ comes from the Latin term ‘quid pro quo,’ which means ‘something for something.’

    What a missed opportunity for a coin or token to have a very catchy name. Came with a show and cosplay, too, but it turned out to be a fraud and a hoax. Still ashamed that I even posted the original story and hope no one bought any. If they make Season Two, is should be called, “Squid Pro Quo.”

    In the following video, he asks if you think the show was just sadism? What I saw of the show, I liked certain characters and people. The actors were good. The show was clearly very strong. He says it’s just a mockery of the economic ruin that world government is putting people through. Lately, people have talked about Baron Harkoonen and Apocalypse Now or that Book of Boba Fett is like Godfather in space. So, maybe it’s sadism or maybe it’s just a twist on the other things that came before it that you guys already mentioned.

    SQUID GAME CRYPTO: BLOODBATH. MILLIONS LOST. It’s over.
    TechLead
    Ex-Google TechLead on Squid Game token massive losses,

    #248404

    Squid Game 2 is coming….was trending on Twitter. If there is demand, you are a fool to turn down money. You almost have to give more when the public wants more.

    https://variety.com/2021/tv/news/squid-game-season-2-netflix-1235108088/

    Another season of “Squid Game” is on the way.

    Creator Hwang Dong-hyuk confirmed the plans to the Associated Press at a screening and Q&A in Los Angeles for the Korean drama, which became a global phenomenon for Netflix in the past couple months.

    “There’s been so much pressure, so much demand and so much love for a second season. So I almost feel like you leave us no choice!” Hwang told the Associated Press on the Monday night red carpet. “But I will say there will indeed be a second season. It’s in my head right now. I’m in the planning process currently.”

    However, Hwang tempered expectations by saying it’s too early to give any concrete details about the follow-up to the smash hit, and Netflix hasn’t made any official announcement yet. Hwang did say, though, that lead actor Lee Jung-jae will return as main character Seong Gi-hun

    “I do think it’s too early to say when and how that’s going to happen. So I will promise you this, Gi-hun will come back. He will do something for the world,” Hwang said.

    After premiering on Netflix in September, “Squid Game” quickly picked up millions of fans around the world, keeping the No. 1 spot on Netflix’s top 10 most popular shows list for weeks. As of last week, it’s already racked up more than 3 billion minutes watched, according to Nielsen, and it’s projected to make Netflix $891 million in value, according to leaked internal documents acquired by Bloomberg.

    Speaking to Variety in late September after the show’s premiere, and before it skyrocketed to fame, Hwang said he would consider employing a writers room and multiple directors if he were to make a Season 2.

    “I don’t have well developed plans for ‘Squid Game 2,’” he said at the time. “It is quite tiring just thinking about it. But if I were to do it, I would certainly not do it alone. I’d consider using a writers room and would want multiple experienced directors.”

    #248408

    Considering how little it cost to produce, and how much “money” it “should have made”, was a possible second season was not coming?

    I think Netflix is waiting on a screenplay before green lighting season two.

    #248601

    https://vigilantcitizen.com/moviesandtv/squid-game-the-meaning-of-its-messages-and-symbolism/

    The Netflix series “Squid Game” is about poor people taking part in horrific games while elite “VIPs” watch the show for entertainment. Through messages and symbolism, “Squid Game” reveals what is truly about: The incurable sickness of the elite.

    Warning: Humungous spoilers ahead!

    If you enjoy watching people getting killed execution-style, boy do I have the Netflix series for you. It’s called Squid Game and it also features a bunch of people falling from high platforms and splattering onto the ground. Indeed, you will witness so many brutal deaths in Squid Game that you won’t have a choice but to become desensitized to them. Even the characters in the series end up having whole conversations about their childhood or something while others are getting shot in the face about ten feet away from them. They don’t care anymore. And you won’t either. And that’s kind of the point.

    Despite the fact that Squid Game features extreme levels of gore and violence, the marketing surrounding it seems insidiously conceived to be appealing to children.

    This is one of the images one can come across while browsing Netflix. Children could easily mistake this thing for a children’s movie and there is nothing preventing them from watching it.

    The main villain looks like he’s straight out of an episode of the Mighty Morphin Power Rangers. His workers look like buttons on a Playstation controller.

    In short, everything is there to lure children to the series to then traumatize them with scenes of rare violence and psychopathic mind games.

    A Squid Game-themed playground in a train station in South Korea. In the series, the playground is where dozens of poor people get killed by soldiers, all for the elite’s entertainment. Today’s pop culture is sick.

    At the core of Squid Game is the age-old and undying “legends” of rich elite people recruiting peasants and forcing them to play deadly games for their entertainment. The 1924 short story The Most Dangerous Game is about a Russian aristocrat who captures people, releases them in the wilderness, and hunts them for sport; The 1994 movie Surviving the Game is about a homeless guy who gets offered a “job” only to end up in a remote location and to become the prey in a hunting game played by rich and powerful people. More recently, the Hunger Games trilogy is all about poor people killing each other under the watchful eyes of the elite.

    Many legends are based on true stories. And there’s something about these “elite games” stories that ring true. Squid Game took this concept, added elements of high-tech dystopia, and mixed in a whole lot of occult elite insanity. The result appears to have struck a nerve because Squid Game is on its way to becoming the biggest Netflix series in history.

    But, like most Netflix series, the messages in Squid Game are twisted. It is about the culture of death that obsesses the elite and making the viewers a part of it. And, through subtle symbolism, the philosophy of the elite is there for you to witness.

    Here’s a look at the messages and the symbolism in this series.

    Two Circles

    The series is about heavily indebted people who get recruited to play a “game” where the winner gets a massive cash prize. The losers? They die in horrible ways. We eventually learn that this entire ordeal was orchestrated by a group of rich elite people who enjoy watching miserable peasants being humiliated, infantilized, and forced to become immoral animals in order to survive.

    The core theme of this series is aptly summed up during the very first seconds of the first episode.

    the introduction of the series shows an overhead view of children playing Squid Game on a playground.

    The outline of this game is also the main logo of the series. The reason: It perfectly illustrates the core philosophy of Squid Game and, by extension, the elite. The rectangle represents the masses. The circle at the bottom of it represents those who are poor and heavily in debt. The triangle above the rectangle represents the elite ruling over the masses. The upper circle represents the all-powerful occult elite that controls the world.

    Appropriately enough, the narrator explains that the children who play Squid Game must make their way to the upper circle to win. When that happens, the narrator says:

    “And, in that moment, I felt as if I owned the entire world.”

    At the beginning of the series, the main protagonist, named Gi-hun, is clearly in the lower circle of society. He steals money from his mother and runs away from the shady people to whom he owes money.

    Then, Gi-hun gets his first taste of elite sickness. While waiting for the subway, Gi-hun is approached by a mysterious salesman who happens to know everything about him. He proposes Gi-hun to play a game where he can win money.

    When the salesman wins, he doesn’t want Gi-hun’s money. He wants to slap him in the face. The elite doesn’t get pleasure out of more money, it gets pleasure out of sadistic thrills such as slapping this poor guy in the face over and over again.

    When Gi-hun finally wins a round, he can’t wait to slap the guy right back in the face. However, the salesman stops him and shows him the money.

    For a moment, Gi-hun did not care about the money, he got caught up in the sadistic thrills of the elite. This scene foreshadows what will happen to Gi-hun in the end. After this humiliating game, the salesman proposes Gi-hun to participate in another game where he can win much more money.

    After accepting the offer, Gi-hun is picked up by a car and is gassed to sleep. He wakes up in a dystopian nightmare.
    Squid Game = Society Ruled by the Elite

    The games take place in a massive compound hidden on a remote island. In many ways, this place resembles an MKULTRA black site where sick experiments take place.

    In many ways, the dystopian system that takes place inside these walls is a microcosm of our modern society.

    Players are reduced to a number and are constantly monitored.

    The workers who enforce the rules are also tightly monitored.

    The players of the game are stripped of all possessions, dignity and are infantilized to a ridiculous degree. These players represent how the elite perceives the masses.

    Before each game, the players are taken through a maze of stairs inspired by M.C. Escher drawings. This place conveys a sense of confusion and disorientation which furthers the players’ infantile state.

    Games take place in colorful playgrounds which we naturally associate with the fun and innocence of childhood. However, every “playground” becomes the site of brutal mass murders carried by faceless workers. They hate the wholesomeness of childhood. They want sad, broken individuals.

    At one point, the players actually band together and demand a vote to end this madness.

    A rule allows players to vote to stop the game.

    The players end up voting for stopping the game and everybody goes back home. However, nearly everyone realizes that they have lots of problems that can only be fixed with money. Conveniently enough, the organizers of the game keep track of these players and invite them back. The result: Most of them go back to the game of their own free will. This concept is important to the occult elite as they believe it liberates them from karmic laws.

    In short: The democratic process was an illusion. The elite rigged the system to obtain the result it wanted to see.

    When they’re back in the game, the solidarity between the players quickly dissipates. In order to see the players turn on each other, the organizers purposely give them a single egg as a meal. Surely enough, the players start fighting for the precious eggs. This reflects a classic tactic of the ruling class: By making resources scarce, the masses stop focusing on the rulers and start fighting each other for scraps.

    The next games are specifically designed to pit the players against each other. For instance, the marbles game requires players to form teams of two. Naturally, most players team up with the person they are closest to. One guy even matches up with his wife. Then they learn that the two players must play against each other … and the loser dies.

    Gi-hun tricks this old confused man (who was his friend) to win the game. He had to stoop low to survive. More on the old man later.

    Players also realize that they can kill each other with total impunity outside the games. This leads to chaos and murders when the players are in the main area.

    Dead bodies are placed in creepy black boxes with bows on them. A gift of human sacrifice to the elite.

    The bodies are incinerated in industrial-size installations. Considering the fact that the elite is obsessed with global depopulation, each death is a “gift”.

    In the first episode, Gi-hun gives his daughter a gift that looks like the creepy coffins. One of the many instances of foreshadowing in the series.

    When she opens up the box, we realize that the gift is a gun-shaped lighter.

    This scene foreshadows the numerous deaths by gunshot that are about to happen. Also, the gun lights fire which can refer to the bodies being incinerated. The fact that Gi-hun gives this gift to his daughter is in line with the overall agenda of exposing the youth to the elite’s sickness.

    Elite Sickness

    For the final three games, the organizers welcome VIPs – ultra-rich, elite people who came to watch the show in-person. Through symbolism, the series indicates who exactly these people are.

    The VIPs walk around with animal masks on their faces. The occult elite has been doing this for centuries.

    Left: One of the VIPs. Right: Helene de Rothschild at a 1972 occult elite ball.

    This picture from the Church of Satan website shows a bunch of people wearing animal masks symbolizing the embrace of humans’ animalistic side.

    Appropriately enough, these VIPs are obsessed with the two core elements of humans’ animalistic side: Lust and blood.

    The lounge where the VIPs sit and watch people die is pure decadence. Humans are used as furniture and decoration – another way of portraying the dehumanization of the masses. This VIP is immediately attracted to the server and needs to “have” him right away.

    The VIP brings the server to the VIP room to be “satisfied”. That room is covered with art that reflects the VIP’s advanced state of perversion.

    After five games, there are only three players left. They are the “elite” players. Consequently, they are given fancy clothes and are treated to a feast. No more boiled eggs for these three. The setting of this feast could not be more symbolic.

    For the feast, the tables are placed in the shape of a triangle with light in the middle. That triangle is placed atop a checkerboard pattern floor. Also, there are two “pillars” of light on each side.

    This is all blatant Masonic symbolism.

    Classic Masonic symbols: The triangle with the all-seeing eye, the checkerboard pattern floor, and the twin pillars.

    The scene conveys the occult and ritualistic nature of this game. In Freemasonry, the checkboard floor is the transformative surface where rituals take place.

    The most powerful ritual of all: Blood sacrifice. And that’s exactly what the VIPs want to see happen.

    At the end of the feast, the workers remove everything … except for the steak knives.

    The three remaining players sit on their beds around the ritualistic floor while holding their knives. Also, notice that the walls are “decorated” with images depicting the horrific games the players had to go through. This is kind of like Netflix using “entertainment” to remind the masses of how they are being controlled by the elite.

    As expected, one player slashes the throat of another player who dies. The blood sacrifice to the elite is complete.

    If one fast forwards a whole lot of stabbing, we learn that Gi-hun ultimately wins the game. Therefore, he is sent back to the real world with the equivalent of $38 million in his bank account.

    Does he finally chill out and live it up? Nope. He’s basically dead inside and he spends about a year mopping around. Then, Gi-hun receives a symbolic invitation.

    The meeting is on the 7th floor of a building called “Sky”, 30 minutes before Christmas.

    In several spiritual currents including the Kabbalah, “7th heaven” (which is literally translated to “7th sky” in some languages) means “the highest heaven, where God and the most exalted angels dwell”.

    Gi-hun finds the old man from the game on his death bed.

    In a major plot twist, we learn that the old man is actually super-rich. He’s also the “creator” of the game. When Gi-hun asks him why he created such a horrific system, he answers:

    “If you have too much money, it doesn’t matter what you buy, eat or drink. It all gets boring. All of my clients eventually started saying the same things when we talked. Everybody felt that there was no joy in their lives anymore. And so, we decided to get toghether and started asking what could we all do to finally have some fun?”

    Does this explain why the elite partakes in such extreme and depraved activities (i.e. Epstein Island)? In any case, simply watching the games wasn’t enough anymore for this old man anymore. He actually wanted to be a player in the game in order to feel alive.

    When one rewatches the series, one realizes that this old man (aka player #001) had a great influence in the game (while also apparently being immune to getting killed). He was the equivalent of an elite plant amongst the masses. For instance, he had the final and deciding vote during the democratic process. Also, he stopped the night of murders by yelling and causing the workers to come out and stop the violence.

    Gi-hun comes out of his meeting in the 7th sky a changed man. To reflect this profound change, he dyes his hair red (the color of sacrifice and transformation in occult circles). Then, finally decides to board a plane and go see his daughter.

    However, at the last second, he turns back.

    Gi-hun wants to return to the game because “he needs to know who is behind it”.

    So, instead of seeing his daughter and finally being part of her life, Gi-hun wants to go back to the madness. That’s crazy. The real reason for him wanting to back: He is now infected with the sickness of the elite (represented by his red hair). He feels dead inside … unless he partakes in the extreme thrills of the game.

    The ultimate proof of this is the fact:

    The Power Rangers guy who oversees the Squid Game is a past winner. He also got infected and needed to go back.

    In short, the ending is not happy. Everyone loses the game. Except for the elite.
    In Conclusion

    Squid Game became the biggest series in Netflix history for several reasons. Beyond its shocking violence and gripping story, the series explores several themes such as religion, human nature, and the pitfalls of economic inequalities. While several news sources interpreted Squid Game as a “critique of capitalism”, they seem to overlook the most obvious and glaring theme: Society being ruled by a sick occult elite that takes pleasure in dividing, controlling, dehumanizing, infantilizing, and outright abusing the masses. And that story doesn’t end with this game being taken down … it ends with the winner going back to it.

    In this sense, we witness a form of Stockholm Syndrome where people who get abused end up identifying with their abusers. And that’s kind of the goal of the series: The viewers end up enjoying watching this sick form of entertainment the same way the VIPs enjoy watching people getting killed. Then, they feel dead inside.

    #251251

    Squid Game Says More About Communism Than Capitalism
    ReasonTV

    The breakout Netflix series contains critiques of a decidedly “anti-capitalist” political and economic system that’s haunted the Korean Peninsula.

    Squid Game, the breakout Korean series about players competing to the death for a giant piggy bank full of cash, is Netflix’s biggest series launch, and co-CEO Ted Sarandos says “there’s a very good chance it will be our biggest show ever.”

    Critics have argued that the show offers a devastating critique of contemporary capitalism.

    In a Jacobin review headlined, “Squid Game Is An Allegory of Capitalist Hell,” the writer asserts that “Korea’s extreme inequality is Squid Game’s central theme.” New York Times reporter Jin Yu Young wrote that “it has…tapped a sense familiar to people in the United States…that prosperity in nominally rich countries has become increasingly difficult to achieve, as wealth disparities widen and home prices rise past affordable levels.”

    The show’s creator Hwang Dong-hyuk told Variety that he “wanted to write a story that was an allegory or fable about modern capitalist society, something that depicts an extreme competition, somewhat like the extreme competition of life.”

    “Is there a theme more unifying in global pop culture than ‘capitalism is bad?'” asks Vulture writer Roxana Hadadi in her recap of one episode before continuing, “It helps that the statement is true, of course…”

    But Squid Game has a much richer and more resonant takeaway than “capitalism is bad.”

    (Warning: This article and video contain spoilers.)

    The series hints at a different message when Front Man, the Darth Vader–esque manager of the dangerous and lucrative series of competitions, chastises an employee who violated the rules. “You’ve ruined the most crucial element of this place: equality,” he says.

    Later, players are invited to witness the mass execution of those who violated the “pure ideology” of this insulated world when they participated in an organ harvesting scheme for personal enrichment, with the emphasis on the enrichment as the heart of the crime. Throughout the games, the faceless pink-uniformed workers are all masked with only symbols distinguishing their ranks in the collective’s hierarchy. Meanwhile, the elites sit cloistered together, observing the spectacle from above.

    Does this all sound like a reference to capitalism or a different economic system—the one that’s actually haunted the Korean Peninsula?

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