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LEARNING DAY

Nerding Day: WikiHow to Act Like Shinji Ikari 🌭

WikiHow is an instructional site started by aliens to bring down humanity from the inside, beginning with our most gullible and least capable. Every how-to is not only incorrect, but escalates stakes in such a way that you are guaranteed to be ruined as a human being by the end of it. If you look up how to get into AirSoft and carefully follow every step, you’ll wind up the cause of a piercing cellphone alert by the end of it. If you look up how to cosplay as your favorite anime character, you’ll get a step-by-step guide to suicide. I was joking about the first one, I think, until I actually look up the “How to Get into Airsoft” page. I am not at all joking about the second one.

Neon Genesis Evangelion is one of the most famous and influential anime ever produced, so already everyone interesting is totally lost, and everyone I don’t want to talk to knows exactly what I’m talking about. If you’re one of the cool kids who thinks “Neon Genesis Evangelion” is an autocorrect disaster you get trying to research a used Hyundai, let me break it down for you: Schoolgirls, giant robots, confusing metaphysical bullshit, something something killing and/or becoming god. 

It has all the anime hallmarks. It may actually be the reason all anime is that!

The main character of Neon Genesis Evangelion is Shinji Ikari, who is the anime Holden Caulfield. Shinji Ikari sucks shit. That’s the point of him. He’s a totally ruined little boy who fails in every direction at once and spends his days mentally rehearsing long speeches about how that’s all your fault. Nobody wants to be Shinji, and that very much includes Shinji. So already this guide is for nobody, and it’s going to teach them how to do something they don’t want to do, and it’s going to do that completely wrong. But here’s an important quirk: You look at the bottom of the images below and they’ll tell you the page is called “How to Cosplay as Shinji Ikari.” 

That’s a lie. That is a lie WikiHow is telling you, I presume to escape the class action lawsuit you’ll join by the end of this article. Check that red box in the image above: The original title was “How to Act Like Shinji Ikari,” which is a very different thing. Don’t worry, this guide is still about acting like Shinji. The title is the only part they changed. It’s the work ethic you’d expect from the site that pays impoverished artists to trace film stills for 3 Cedi per page.

Let’s get the cosplay part over with:

Wear slacks and a white shirt. This is nothing. Nobody wants to dress like this at Comic Con, they’ll think you’re a Mormon there to protest. This is what every drunk waiter is wearing two hours after pulling a double. This is how far you’ll get undressing a magician before the charm of the hidden handkerchief trick wears off and you leave him to masturbate into his bottomless top hat. Nobody is looking up an article about how to dress like Shinji Ikari. 

“Help! What are those, slacks?” Fuck you, WikiHow, you fail at existence.

I will give the artist credit, they really capture the spirit of cosplay, which is the art of looking almost like an anime character but less attractive. 

But this is it. This is the only part of the cosplay article that teaches you how to cosplay. There weren’t even tracks for this to veer off – they built four feet of rails that led straight into the side of an orphanage.

Step 1: Learn to stalk an anime character. 

This page could end here and it would already ruin a life. This is it: This is how you build a subhuman. “Learn to stalk an anime character” is the Baby Shoes Never Worn of unwashed 13 year olds. You don’t even need to specify that it’s Shinji Ikari to unravel everything good about a child. But it helps!

I worry those of you unfamiliar with the show aren’t getting the stakes. Here’s something to establish Shinji’s character for you non-anime folks, shredding through this article on your snowboards, dipping your Oakleys to scoff at us Inside Children: 

There’s a scene in Neon Genesis Evangelion where one of Shinji’s fellow tween robo-pilots is severely injured, so he goes to the hospital to masturbate to her unconscious body. It’s not played as fun! This is anime, I have to specify that. The scene is there to illustrate what a total shitbag Shinji Ikari is, despite his narcissistic victim delusions. 

Study that shit intently, kids! Watch it over and over, learn to get inside his mind at that moment, really internalize his logic until it’s your own. Think about it, really process the logistics of ejaculating to coma patients. That is the only way, the only way to pull off a black-slacks-white-button-down costume. Without it you’re just a valet using his break to hustle nerd tail from the weeb con. 

Hey okay fuck you Wikihow. Shinji doesn’t like Gang of Four. Shinji is very clearly the kind of poser kid who listens to music he thinks gives him status rather than stuff he actually enjoys. Just because he found a cool thrift store shirt one time, it doesn’t mean he appreciates the thin pop veneer over the stripped down lo-fi punk foundations of Content – you take it back!

But you can kind of see where the romance of Shinji Ikari might come in for people who skim the anime while playing Genshin Impact on their phone. We’re all suckers for a quiet boy who listens to music a lot. In theory that’s a Baby Driver. Shy boy loves music too much is shorthand for a sweet child with a rich internal life. In theory. In practice it’s more a warning sign for a domestic terrorist, especially since Shinji Ikari is a struggle-dump of a boy who never once listened to Entertainment!.

Fucking just master an instrument for this! 

Not to enrich your life, or for the love of music – spend decades of your life perfecting a difficult art because WikiHow said to. And when a tremulous waif moved by your performance asks why you play – you tell her it’s to be more like Shinji Ikari. She either doesn’t know who that is, in which case you have to explain the hospital jerkoff scene until she slaps you in the mouth, or she knows exactly who that is and she will slap you in the mouth before you try to explain the hospital jerkoff scene.

Here it is: Here’s the one step nobody interested in this guide has any trouble with. Look at that boy aggressively avoiding eye contact. That is the thousand-yard stare of a professional girl avoider. That kid successfully made it around the corner without fully seeing a girl before the adrenaline dumped out on him and he threw up in his backpack so he could take the shame home.

Imagine if I was wrong though! The guide thinks you’re not already doing this. It’s written like there are happy extroverted teens with active social lives reading this article, and WikiHow is like “hey Part 2, ditch those losers and learn to cultivate self doubt, idiot.”

Hahaha “become desperate for love.” That’s a step! 

That is an actual step somebody wrote down. This is exactly what I’d tell my hypnotized grade school bully to kickstart an elaborate revenge. This is literally reverse therapy.

I mean, credit where it’s due, from the first bullet point it seems like the page kind of wants to warn you about itself. 

Become passive and lose agency, WikiHow says. Also don’t wear a sheer shirt – Shinji Ikari wears thicker weaves, that was Step 1. But Step 4 is “lose your free will and learn to love conformity.” Both equally important.

And now we spiral. 

Here’s where “How to Act Like Shinji Ikari” earns its Hot Dog wings. This moment right here, when it starts to become self aware. Where the guide itself realizes that every successive step is making you an objectively worse person. This point where even WikiHow, the most oblivious of Wikis, the least sapient of Hows, thinks “oh no, I fucked up! I fucked up! Kid, you need to go – google how to act like Goku, that one just teaches you to abandon your wife and kids for the love of punches!”

You will be bullied for this, and your bullies will be right. 

This is a step. “Be more susceptible to bullying.” 

This is according to plan! Write down in your journal: “Day 136 of becoming Shinji – Michael pulled down my pants in the cafeteria and the entire school laughed at my bashful penis. It’s working!”

“Step 7: Oh god, I shouldn’t be doing this. I started writing this guide because I desperately need the ramen money, but I didn’t know I’d have to kill a child! There’s no time to edit, I can’t! The WikiHow text editor only scrolls forward like an oldschool Mario game. Some SEO bot crawled this search term, which was probably a dyslexic kid looking for Shinji’s voice actor, and now here I am. Here I am teaching children about the glory of suicide for $6.82 cents a day, and I will have to explain that. I will have to explain that to the devil when my time is come. Step 8. Live With a Penguin: Penguins are often found-“

Let’s head down to the Q&A section and collectively realize that people actually did read this, holy shit, they internalized it, and they want to engage further: 

Haha if you don’t have a robot, pretend your bike is the robot! It’s the saddest advice from a parent that doesn’t have time for crafts, especially when you remember that Shinji’s robot was actually some sort of bioengineered motherbeast. Pretend your bike is your mother, who is never coming back! Pretend she loves you but has gone mad from losing her humanity, and then pedal her as hard as you can – pedal your mother, child, pedal her to undo the collective psychic mass of humanity’s sin! Do a bunny hop!

Man, that’s a perfect ending line but WikiHow isn’t done apologizing yet:

Once again, child, you simply must be prepared for scorn. 

Step 1. Prepare for scorn. 

Step 2. Internalize scorn and realize that it’s earned.

Step 3. Try not to kill yourself – even though Shinji would if he was just a lil’ braver!

This article can never be sorry enough. It ends like every Malibu Comics series: with profuse apologies and passive aggressive blame shifting.

HOT TIP: Life is worth living. 

That’s seriously the last line. That’s the way the guide “How to Cosplay as Shinji Ikari” ends: with a firm reminder that there is still some good to be had in life, even though you’re currently using it to learn how to act like a cartoon child sex pest, and you’re taking those lessons from a Journalism School dropout making moral compromises for Hot Pocket money. 

This whole thing was a missed opportunity. This should have been about Shinji’s caretaker. She kicked ass. Maybe there’s a “How to Act Like Misato Katsuragi” – all having you get wrecked on tallboys, fuck a lot, own a penguin, and do sweet drifts in your sports car. Let’s see if WikiHow has that shit-

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LEARNING DAY

Learning Day: Sleep Walkin’!

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Learning Day: Napoleon Bonaparte’s Saucy Romance Novel

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Learning Day: Is Your Pet Psychic?

At this point in my 🌭 career, I’ve read a lot of books about psychics. The common thing I’ve found about all of them is that they’re written to convince people they are unique and magical, but one brave psychic author has broken the mold because he wants you to believe that your pet hamster is more special and magical than you! 

The author of this book, Richard Webster, has written several others related to psychic phenomena, including Pendulum Magic, Write Your Own Magic, and Astral Travel for Beginners, which I imagine is the best and only way to skip the line at Disney World. Although he is presumably a psychic, the idea of this book isn’t so much that you develop a psychic power; it’s that you can become aware of the immense psychic energy radiating from your pet iguana. 

The book begins how every great story should, by immediately making me question everything. From its very dedication, this book is looking to make you spiral out of control. 

Is Ken Ring an animal or a person? If he’s a person, why the paw print underneath? If he’s a dog, why does it have a last name, and why is that last name different from Richard Webster’s? My good friend is something I would call a person or a dog. Did this man dedicate the book to a dog that wasn’t his? Did he give his dog a full Christian name? Is this just a signature? Gasp, could Richard Webster be the dog?

I googled Ken Ring, which is apparently the name of a Swedish rapper with a popular album called Mitt Hem Ă„r Blir Ditt Hem, obviously named after what the Swedish Chef says when a chicken is escaping. So, is Richard Webster good friends with a famous Swedish rapper? Or does he have an extremely formal dog? I don’t know which of those options is more likely OR funnier.  

After its confusing dedication, Is Your Pet Psychic opens up by immediately answering its own question: yes, your pet is probably psychic. It turns out most pets are psychic unless you got a real dud. Richard Webster proves this through a series of anecdotes about animals with psychic and even precognitive abilities. For instance, a dog named Hector was once observed in Vancouver boarding and inspecting four different ships. A ship on the way to Japan eventually found him stowed away. When they docked, Hector immediately exited and ran to a Dutch ship his owner was departing from! What a magical story that a sailor from the 1800s insane from eating nothing but whisky and beef jerky didn’t make up!

Let me stop you right there, Richard. This man has way too much faith in dogs. Sure, maybe some dogs are brilliant. Maybe they’re noble beasts of great intellect, but some dogs are this dog, my dog:

This dog has never had a thought in her entire life, let alone a psychic premonition. This man thinks my dog, who doesn’t always remember she has a neck, has precognitive abilities? Sir, she doesn’t have cognitive abilities. I decided to try one of the tests from the book with her. 

She got nervous because I was sitting on the floor with her but not letting her climb into my lap because she can’t practice her psychic powers if she falls asleep, and she falls asleep the instant she sits on my lap. She started to shake, got distracted by a fly, tried to kill the fly, failed, hit her head on a door frame, then cried. I guess that’s what she wanted to do? Fail at murder, then get upset by it? If so, maybe my dog is psychic? I’m so sorry I misjudged her. She can do whatever she puts her mind to. 

The book isn’t just dog-centric, though. Even though we obviously start by talking about dogs, there are also chapters devoted to cats, horses, and “animals tall and small.” The cat section is one of my favorites because it proves historically how magical cats are because Persians used them as shields against their enemies. 

Were they running into battle holding the cats in front of them, or was duct tape already invented in ancient Persia? Also, I don’t know if being pushed to the front of a battle for slaughter proves incredible power. It seems like if cats were so powerful, they wouldn’t have to worry about getting forced to the front of the murder parade. Also, how many times did this Persian king try Operation: Cat Shield before it worked?

Normally, when I verbally ask my cat to come to me, she telepathically responds that I can eat a dick and snuggles into whatever dark, dusty corner of my home is currently her tyrannically ruled territory. However, when I tried this, she did show up about ten minutes after I stopped asking her to. It actually spooked the hell out of me because showing up ten minutes late and looking annoyed as hell is the most respectful thing she’s ever done to me. My cat is boring, so here’s a picture of one with her spiritual energy for reference. 

I’m starting to realize most of these tests designed by Richard Webster to prove your animals are psychic basically amount to animals doing all of the things they would normally do without psychic powers. Your cat showing up in your house doesn’t prove it’s psychic. A psychic cat is one who appears right as you’re choking on a fish to swallow your last breath, purring as the prophecy comes true. Let’s hope the tests for horses won’t be so goddamn stupid. 

This test raised a very important question in my mind: could Ken Ring be a horse? It seems to follow the same naming conventions as Cork Beg. I Googled “do horses have last names” because I’ve never owned a horse, and maybe they all have last names, and I don’t know. From this research, it doesn’t seem like last names are more common for horses than any other animal. I then Googled “Ken Ring horse,” and that’s when the mystery cracked wide open for me.

Somehow Ken Ring horse led me to the Twitter account for a New Zealand weather forecaster named Ken Ring. Where did Richard Webster, author of Is Your Pet Psychic?, grow up?

Ken Ring is a person! Not a dog or a horse at all! Sorry, I’ve completely forgotten what this article was about. Luckily, if there’s one thing I’ve learned from working for 1900HOTDOG, it’s that comedy is mostly discovering and solving previously undiscovered mysteries, especially murders. Anyway, back to horses. Here’s another exciting horse telepathy test:

Can you imagine speaking telepathically to your horse for the first time only to learn that it does not love you? What if the horse says, “I see you only as a stylish little hat I sometimes wear? You are not more than a fashion accessory, a thing, a pet, now brush me, stooge, brush me and feed me treats, tiny fool!” That would be pretty cool. Now I want to know all horses’ opinions of me. What could be cooler than talking to a horse?

Oh right, there’s an entire section of this book about ghost animals. It proves ghost animals are real with an anecdote about a woman who was once Richard Webster’s secretary, and when her cat died, she still felt it curled up at the end of her bed at night. Richard’s solution to this was to invent a special animal seance that allows someone to say goodbye to a beloved pet currently haunting them. It’s a lengthy process that essentially involves thinking about the animal and seeing if it shows up. In fact, most psychic animal communication is aggressively thinking at animals. 

For a book claiming to be about psychic animals, it sure requires a lot of work from me. Work, that I’m noticing none of my animals have put in. If they’re so psychic why haven’t they checked this book out from the library themselves? I’m starting to think none of this is legitimate animal science at all. Does Ken Ring even exist? And can I enter him in the Kentucky derby? I’m still not sure. 

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Learning Day: LDS Preparedness Manual

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Learning Day: YouTube’s Pervert Bar 🌭

The oldest joke on the internet is to say, “I bet this is somebody’s fetish!” when doing something totally innocuous, like filming a woman smearing the makeup off a clown’s face with her bare feet. But the truth is, nobody making non-porn wants to know if the audience is secretly using their work to facilitate masturbation. You might be just absolutely going to town on your meat the entire time you’re reading my books but I don’t need to hear about it. 

And yet, in an ongoing effort to worsen the lives of every creator on its platform, YouTube has implemented a “most replayed” feature to answer the question, “Are my viewers pleasuring themselves to this?” When you mouseover the play bar at the bottom of most videos, a waveform of hills and valleys now appears:

The hills are where previous viewers saw something that made them pause and/or go back. “But what does this have to do with viewers strumming the ol’ flesh banjo?” you ask. Well, YouTube didn’t come up with this idea on their own, they stole it from Pornhub. No, really — you can see the same waveform below on Pornhub’s erotic massage vignette, “Sensual Suite -Ella Hughes & Laz Fyre *FULL VERSION* Passionate oiled PAWG”:

That little gray hill that our orange playback bar is about to reach is where the lady and her masseuse will take their relationship to another level. That “frequently paused/replayed” feature is specifically for their users to skip right to the “good parts” of a porn video, if they’re not into all the backstory or are simply too pressed for time. You know, like maybe they’re a masked vigilante and, before racing to a hostage crisis, need to quickly finish cranking their hog.* 

So on Pornhub, it’s essentially an “Audience Cranked Their Hogs Here” meter and on YouTube, an “Interest” meter. Or, you know, an “Audience Cranked Their Hogs Here” meter. Warning: we’re about to go down a rabbit hole that is not easily escaped.

If you search YouTube for, say, massage techniques to treat sciatica pain, you might get this video from a pair of chiropractors working on a patient in severe discomfort…

…but then you’ll see the replay spike where one of them kind of puts his hand near her crotch

…as if viewers seeking sciatica relief thought that just maybe they were about to get the same plot turn they enjoyed in “SSEH&LFFVPOP” above. Spoiler: the patient instead recoils in pain, because what he’s doing hurts a lot (unrelated, but note that chiropractors are practicing a form of alternative medicine that many believe to be a scam).

Once I noticed this cursed feature, I became obsessed. On every video I watched, I observed where the interest spikes were, asking myself the same question over and over: “Are people cranking their hogs to this?”

Now, obviously not every single popular replay moment is prurient in nature. On that show where they interview celebrities while forcing them to eat increasingly spicy chicken wings, the replay spikes are right when the guest nearly vomits from eating the hottest wing. On the Hydraulic Press Channel, it’s when the object they’re pressing shatters and nearly kills everyone in the room. In those bizarre animations for toddlers, it’s typically some broad joke like this baby filling its outfit with five pounds of its own feces in “Baby Huggy Wuggy & Baby Player Are So Sad With Poppy Playtime Best Animation Compilation.” 

Speaking of which, do you want to know why kid-favorite YouTubers like Logan and Jake Paul just randomly start screaming, for little or no reason? “I’m thinking it’s cocaine, Jason.” I mean, maybe, but it’s also because their little viewers love it. Almost all of the replay spikes you see below are somebody, or everyone, suddenly screaming their lungs out:

But as you probably suspected, what you mostly find is a population that, despite living in an ocean of infinite free pornography, is desperately horny in ways that surprised even me. In this popular YouTuber’s video about thrift store tips, this first spike I’ve captured below is simply other people pausing/replaying to read the on-screen text…

…but then you notice a bigger replay spike later in the video, and…

…it’s exactly ONE SECOND of cleavage, and viewers carefully scrubbing back and forth  to catch and preserve that elusive, precious moment forever. In this video about a chainsaw demonstration, one of the hosts wore tight leggings and you can see spikes where viewers paused to look at her butt (in case you think I’m engaging in wild speculation here, just read the top comment): 

But, hey, it’s 2022, where else are you going to get a chance to see a woman in leggings? “Jason, we need even sadder examples!” is what none of you are saying and to that I reply, you’re in luck. Accumulating and interpreting internet analytics data is my fetish. 

One of my favorite film analysis channels is Pop Culture Detective, they do extremely smart, even-handed examinations of sexist film tropes like this excellent video about movies that treat non-consensual voyeurism as charming. So, of course, the big replay spike is viewers pausing and rewatching one of the clips they use as a negative example of sexist voyeurism, because it features exactly two seconds of a woman’s butt in a modest two-piece swimsuit:

Meanwhile, their most popular video is about the problematic, “hot girl is too naive to know what sex is” trope. The big replay spike on that one is viewers carefully going frame-by-frame to see if they can glimpse a nude Amy Adams in the 2007 PG-rated Disney film Enchanted, because there’s a gag where she’s briefly naked behind a towel…

…and who knows, maybe you’ll be the first guy in fifteen years to notice the editors accidentally left in two frames of vulva. 

Okay, enough of that — let’s just accept that any glimpse of female skin, regardless of context, is going to trigger a hog-crank spike. 

Instead, let’s move on to ASMR, which I’ve always assumed to be intended as relief for uncranked hogs, but I actually don’t see replay spikes where there’s the equivalent of a “money shot” (the spikes I find are always when the speaker whispers too quietly and the viewers go back to try to hear it). But then in this one, there’s a moment where the whispering young woman scratches a match for a while and then, finally, lights it. And there’s your replay spike: 

Is… that a thing? Are there people who crank their hogs to… fire? Matches? Women lighting matches on fire? Here, let me google it:

Oh, so it’s a whole genre. Huh. You learn something new every day. So, if you’ve ever made a video where you lit a match, go look at your replay trends! Or don’t!

All right, let’s spin the wheel again. What’s the least-sexy activity you can imagine? Wood carving? Great, let’s try it. In this video about a guy making a bowl, the replay spikes are whenever he cuts out the inside of the bowl with a chisel:

Now let’s randomly grab another bowl-carving video and see if it’s a trend. Yep! There’s your spike!

People are just straight up scrubbing around to find the “Chiseling out the bowl” money shot. Let’s try this video about the carving of a big wooden spoon — do we find a big replay spike at the point he chisels out the part of the spoon that’s kind of a bowl? We sure do!

“But Jason, are you saying people are cranking their hogs to this, or just that they just enjoy that bit the most?” My brothers and sisters in Christ, I do not know. Once again the internet has granted me just enough insight into my fellow humans to be tormented, but not enough to be enlightened. Side note: In any kind of video dealing with clay/sculpting/etc, the replayed money shot is when they cut the clay by slicing it with a wire

…which incidentally is also true for cheese-making videos. Again, only a very crass person would suggest that viewers are closing out of those videos the moment they put the wire away, sweaty and spent. That person just happens to be me.

And then you have Mukbang, the enormously popular genre in which hosts eat gigantic piles of food. This is a known fetish for some and, sure enough, you can always find replay spikes at the exact moment the host shoves a big sloppy wad of food into their mouth.

Nothing weird about that. But then I switch over to what is unironically my favorite YouTube channel, the one with the kid in vintage suits who reviews fast food. And then I see that the first big replay spikes are when he bites and chews. Not when he gives his review verdict, or even when he shows off the food — it’s specifically when he bites it.

Again: Are people cranking their hogs to this? I don’t know! In this outdoor cooking channel’s “Ultimate Steak” video, the only big replay spike is when the guy feeds a hunk of meat to his dog. Not the finished product of the recipe, not the prep — the money shot is a close-up of the dog chewing some meat. Is… is that a thing? 

“Speaking of dogs, go look at the replay trends on dog grooming videos!” says a strange voice from the darkness outside my window. Sure, why not. I would predict the money shot there would be the part where they show off the freshly-cleaned dog, or some other satisfying moment of accomplishment. Or, you know, it could be the moment they lift up the dog’s leg to shave its crotch:

I don’t know, man. Maybe they just wanted to see the technique. I’m sure it’s not easy to shave a dog’s crotch, especially if you’re planning to do it as a prank on their owner or something. Either way, I’m done. Feel free to start tracking these trends yourself and report the results in the comments. This is your problem now.

*Masturbating

Hey, for the very first time I am offering SIGNED COPIES of my upcoming novel (no extra cost), If This Book Exists, You’re in the Wrong Universe. Normal unsigned hardcover or ebook copies are at Amazon, Barnes and Noble, or Bookshop. Or anywhere else they sell books.