Views : 54,982
Genre: Entertainment
Date of upload: Dec 24, 2021 ^^
Rating : 4.945 (46/3,302 LTDR)
RYD date created : 2022-04-09T09:06:51.148496Z
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Top Comments of this video!! :3
Good video, I just think that 17 minutes was not nearly enough to grasp the depth of the comics relating to Jack's mental state and the rabbit hole going beyond just what Jack did, thought, and who he interacted with. I would have loved to see a lot more on his work within mazes and on the book, find out why his obsession came about and such. Cases like this deserve so much more than 17 minutes because its nowhere near enough time to grasp the complexity of someone's deteriorating mindset. Delving deeper into the actual content of both his comics and what was within his final notes would make for a story I'd watch for hours. These random web psychological rabbitholes are extremely underrated and I think something like this deserves a lot more content, if not a genuine study on the devolvement of an individual's mental state.
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schizophrenia does not mean split personality (which also is an incorrect term anyway as that would be called dissociated identity in the medical field and is way different from schizophrenia [no delusions etc], and it also does not present as in the video). what most likely happened was him having hallucinations during that video, which lead to him talking to himself (which, if he also was on drugs makes sense)
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3:49 I would like to add my own thoughts onto this subject that they brought up here.
While it is true that art has become far easier to make and that's allowed people to replicate things that were once hard to make with ease, the advancement of technology has also allowed entirely new forms of art to be made, and talent is needed to make more advanced forms of art.
For instance, the movie Killer Bean is a movie that was made by a singular person. Do you think that Michelangelo- with all of his artistic talent- could have also made that movie by painting every individual frame? No, of course he couldn't. For he simply didn't have the tools available to create such pieces of art.
If you think about it, an animation is just thousands upon thousands of pictures put together in a chain. So while it might no longer require talent for an artist to make one frame, it does require talent to make an entire good animation.
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The schizophrenic ramblings of an undoubtedly intelligent man. It's unfortunate that the people around him couldn't find him the help he needed, I'm sure they loved his unique nature and personality greatly.
Additionally, this level of hyperfixation to creation is so compelling to me as an illustrator/creative myself: It brings myself shame when I compare my body of work to his... I could never find the headspace to approach any of the themes he casually and philosophically explored. I also lack the raw, unbridled creativity to convey those ideas properly... In a way I am envious, and it makes me want to be a better person.
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Having come from the same generation of artists that had to adapt to a new, digital playing field, where you had to learn new languages to create websites, and try to keep up with never ending changes to technology in order to try to keep your websites up and functioning, and putting up with people shamelessly swiping your original content from these new, online spaces and sometimes even profiting off of it... all of this kind of stuff was a lot. Especially when you arenât finding fame and fortune when others seem to be tapping into those rewarding ends while you toil away for endless hours working on websites and posting new content that almost nobody sees...
This one struck me hard. Thanks for putting it together, and hopefully contributing to finally making this hard working artist famous. I wish he would have found it much sooner, or at least found peace in some less drastic way.
Cheers
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hi there, just here to talk about suzzzy. i am a person who's suffered years of delusions (now recovering) and i went through something that sounds extremely similar to what he went through. i developed a delusion where i believed i had DID and an alter. obviously i do NOT have DID, this was purely a delusion, but functionally it wasn't far off. i would dissociate and feel like a completely separate person, to the point i could only talk about my "actual" self as if they were a different person. i would talk to my "actual" self, or this "alter" would talk to me although primarily in my mind. i would also write differently and did things i wouldn't normally do. she even had a name (a similarly strange one) "themis"
jack sounds like he went through something similar -- dissociating to the point he thought or had a delusion that he had an "alter" or however he'd perceive it.
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I remember seeing the last will comic many years ago. I always figured as an aritst, that's a great way to go out - having a message left in your art that can be for eternity. but it still hurts knowing in the vast world of the internet, these things can go unnoticed so easily. who knows if someone saw it earlier.
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I really wish this was more in depth, felt like it only scratched the surface and gave a vague summary of the whole story, making it kind of hard to follow. I didn't really get a feel for the comics at all for example, I think it would've been more interesting overall if they were given more attention?
That said I still really enjoyed the video and it did make me want to look into the topic for myself. Really loving the channel, keep up the great work!
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@vodkasvoice
2 years ago
Hearing Hussie's name in here was like suddenly having a brick slammed into my skull from behind.
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