 There comes a time when you'd look for VHS tapes in thrift stores, and fourth wall breaks aside, the most common thing in Lost Episode creepypastas, next to DVDs and virus related videos. However, a big mystery wasn't covered back in 2017. A retired movie theater worker sold a bit of VHS tapes at a local Goodwill. But knowing what's inside the tapes, each of them were sold for 10 cents. It wasn't until 2019 when an unknown individual bought every tape for the total of $100, or $87 during a buy one get one free sale. What was contained inside each tape were cartoon episodes with dramatic changes. Each tape were multiple or one episode per cartoon. Most of them were Nickelodeon and cartoon network shows. Because of how many tapes there were, the individual made a post on the defunct forum site, obscurity format, basically a website talking about dark, disturbing and unknown experiences on television or media formats. This was the post he made before it was deleted. Bought a bin of tapes. Found a bunch of cartoons with disturbing changes. Hello. I recently bought a stack full of VHS tapes. Each of them marked with the name, tunes, in capital letters and messy writing. I've checked roughly 25 tapes and I've been nothing more than a confused mess. With each day, I ponder how could someone roughly edit these episodes. Why do people make these weird versions of cartoons and why does this happen to people? To keep the limit of characters on the forum, I can only cover one video, an episode of SpongeBob SquarePants. I'll post the other two on my website. The first tape started with an episode of SpongeBob SquarePants, something smells. The title card was shown as black and white. Odd. At first, the episode started fine until SpongeBob and Patrick were at the theater. Patrick was over by the food and drinks stand. At this point, the dialogue was normal. Hello? Hello? There must be on break. Patrick started. Oh wait Patrick, I just remembered. I've got some of my peanut onion sundae we can share. SpongeBob said, pulling out the sundae. When Patrick's nose smelled the sundae, instead of his eyebrows being comedically fallen off, his face was violently ripped off, exposing his skeleton. That looks great! Patrick said. The skeleton looked interving, mixed with Patrick's exposed ripped pink skin, and especially the clinking sound of bone. The screen jump cuts to the bathroom with SpongeBob asking Patrick on what he ate. The moment Patrick said about the sundae and SpongeBob saying the word sundae with that close up, that's when things changed. The whispered sundae part glitched halfway through. The audio was then replaced with a number station, said in a monotone almost mechanical male voice. 8111991230 The background was black and there seemed to be a pause. I paused the tape and debunked the number station. August 11, 1991, to 30pm. The date and time the first Nicktoons aired the first three cartoons. I couldn't believe that connection. How could it connect? Is this a horror series and marked by Nickelodeon studios? Was this on Halloween? I checked the date of the tape on the cover, March 20, 2015. How could this have happened? I continued the tape, shaken by the newfound discovery. After the abrupt cut to black, the stick with Nick Error screen appeared. Also after what felt like a minute, when the screen appears for two minutes, it cuts to black abruptly before the tape stops. As I took the tape out, I was surprised to learn that my PC automatically screenshot a picture. For context I connected the VHS player to my PC and at some points to screenshot the events of the tape, only not one single screenshot. But because of the VHS player's rusted cables, the image was corrupted, but I was able to make out what it was. I recreated the scenario by using some art website I found. To this day, I still remember the shocking number station and the event. Tomorrow I'll check out the second tape. Who knows what would it contain?