By making it his mission to kill God, to the point of acquiring a weapon and smuggling it to the Pearly Gates, Grover shows disdain to the concept of divinity and has already killed Him on his mind. By steeling himself enough to go up the Stairway to Heaven not once, but SEVERAL times, no matter how infinitely great or infinitesimally small were the steps he had to take, and ending it by making Kermit take the entire brunt of his sins, Grover has outwilled God. By defying the all-binding, all-blinding light of He Who Comes From Above with the sheer strength of his purpose, demanding that He showed Himself before him, Grover had defeated God -- The very concept of God purpose-wise. Three times had he killed The Father, both in mind, body and spirit. All without firing a single bullet. He had already shown that The Holy Trinity was below him, but Grover still groveled on his spite and foolishness to prove a point, that he would kill God by means as mundane and low as the treason of His own children. The rejection of the gift of Life, the sin against brethren and the audacity to challenge His judgement of life and death: A single tool of murder, the Glock. Little did Grover know, however, that God has already shown enough mercy. As He once did with Lucifer, his rebellious legion of angels and with several iterations of Mankind, He'd reciprocate his wicked, unfathomable purpose. And so, God broke Grover beyond what anyone would expect. He broke Grover's purpose by putting the Damocles above his head, "rewarding" him with power over everything and promptly letting it crush his murderous intent. He broke Grover's body by weighing his mortality against the infinity of the sins of His creation on an endless, relentless flight of stairs. Finally, He broke Grover's mind by making him experience his insignificance when compared to the entire span of Creation, so that when Time and Space have no more meaning than a speck of dust, his mortal brain would wither. Three times had He killed The Muppet by condemning him to sempiternal Death, unending Failure and overwhelming Oblivion. Grover would forever experience everyone's pains and sins, the existence and decay of everything, and everywhere and everywhen that which has been, that is and forever will be. This was God's will. This was Grover's ultimate fall.
@parker_pumpyt11 ай бұрын
this is fantastic 💀
@RahmpageChicken11 ай бұрын
Holy shit, this goes hard
@retroman758111 ай бұрын
The perfect comment doesnt ex
@firenzarfrenzy498511 ай бұрын
You ever consider becoming a writer?
@PixelTheMushroom11 ай бұрын
this perfectly encapsulates the very soul of the original text. I commend you, good sir.
@EasyEighty-Eight11 ай бұрын
The delivery of the line "But none of it deters Grover. He brought the Glock with him," is simultaneously one of the most hilarious and badass lines I've ever heard.
@stardragon789311 ай бұрын
"He would be the Muppet to kill God," is up there too.
@andrewhaywood126211 ай бұрын
He only had one to defend himself from Elmo, to be fair. That, and if the bastards who robbed Hooper's ever came back for more...
@heinrichze-france408910 ай бұрын
"Now who wants the first spanking?" -Hoss Delgado
@striker896110 ай бұрын
I love how it just assumes we know. Not he brought any ol glock with him. He brought THE Glock with him. (THUNDEROUS APPLAUSE AND CHEERING FROM THE AUDIENCE.)
@ianbuchan85486 ай бұрын
@striker8961 Brilliant 👏 🤧
@fetusdeletus926611 ай бұрын
“At this point he wondered if god was that frog he just shoved down the stairs” will never not be the funniest fucking sentence I’ve heard
@august676011 ай бұрын
Adding it to the list. And literally every other line is added to the _other_ list(that one list of insanely raw lines from weird sources)
@JimboPb0511 ай бұрын
@@hhhhhhhhhhhhhnhhhhhhh Officer Balls
@Aegis452111 ай бұрын
@@august6760link?
@jamesgoldring105211 ай бұрын
The story shoulda ended there
@BTKYG11 ай бұрын
Yeah that part killed me
@Skygirl-rp4ob10 ай бұрын
I love how Grover actually commiting 1,048,376 sins but getting 1,048,576 steps implies that either God or Kermit threw in an extra 200 steps just to fuck with him
@Alienrun10 ай бұрын
Plot twist: Grover actually decided to climb Kermit's staircase instead of his own...which is why Kermit was at the top! :O
@Coid79 ай бұрын
I Believe that the 200 were added for Grover skipping a step as in he tried to cheat death and was punished for it.
@TeshiroHiroto8 ай бұрын
he committed 200 sins on his way up
@limeylime80278 ай бұрын
He wanted his sins to be a power of 2 so he did
@malice97208 ай бұрын
not all sin is equal
@Timmy-fk8uk11 ай бұрын
i like how grover managed to commit 200 more sins in his initial journey to the top
@xtfgrw7 ай бұрын
Oh my gosh, someone brought up the difference and said, "Wow they really just added those steps to mess with him" but I had not inkling that it may be because he sinned that many times more.
@christopherthompson54006 ай бұрын
@@xtfgrw another funny interpretation. Kermit said the total and then 30 seconds later narrator says its about 200 less. Just a joke on the fact that we already knew the exact amount so theres no point in saying the wrong estimate. *OR" my preferred interpretation. That kermit is in fact an embodiment of god. There to watch him struggle from the very beggining. That climbing the stairs wasn't necessary to kill god if only grover had realized before his journey. And that as you said, grover had added 200 steps of his own through this whole escapade through the sins he commits in pugatory. But being that all instances of time had already occurred kermit tells him exactly how it will end before it began and grover is still cluessless blinded by rage. And that in grover's quest to kill god he made it harder on himself as is the very nature of taking on an impossible task. God won't let grover kill himself, grover is trapped in an endless eternity.
@Theo-qo7ov3 ай бұрын
There is a version of Grover who kills himself because he thinks he is too immoral
@fravonzonbonn3 ай бұрын
@@christopherthompson5400"kermit is an embodiment of god" kermit at the beginning: "you think yours is long, wait till youve seen mine" i dont like the implications here
@dimm__3 ай бұрын
@fravonzonbonn I on the other hand really like the implication there
@username515511 ай бұрын
So basically, Grover: - Commited over a million sins - Stole a gun - Snuck his gun into the afterlife - Climbed up to all 1 million steps to Heaven in under a week - Was sent back to the bottom of the stairs for doing that thing where you walk up 2 steps at a time because you think you’re cool - Climbed up to Heaven again - Threw Kermit into Hell - Became God - Still tried to kill God even though now he was God - Was flung down to Hell by God for trying to kill God after becoming God Is that right?
@Dante.-11 ай бұрын
He gave him his personal heaven, he forgave him and gave him exactly what he wanted He then cast him down for wanting more
@fuckiopussigetti45311 ай бұрын
@@Dante.-sorry, but you gotta see the body to make sure. If God weren't a bitch ass, he'd climb up those stairs instead of doing a Greek fable fake out
@TheAwesomeHyperon11 ай бұрын
I think those are different endings
@stevem.o.118511 ай бұрын
Basically the plot of "Preacher"
@erectilereptile738311 ай бұрын
But if Grover had basically attained omnipotence, how was he still fallible?
@betoneiracromadarebaixada818711 ай бұрын
Someone out there not only took the time to write a fanfiction about a sesame street character trying to kill god, but also made every line in it hit as hard as humanly conceivable. Humanity was not a mistake
@Poindexterfredrick11 ай бұрын
It was a mistake for the most part, but not this magnificent masterpiece of storytelling lol
@pixellordm878011 ай бұрын
@@Poindexterfredrickmistakes & Perfection are synonyms in the eyes of eternity. A symphony of woe & agony yet also Triumph & Joy. To deem the only thing that can fathom that symphony anything but its whole is foolish.
@Poindexterfredrick11 ай бұрын
Well even humanity’s fûçk ûpš are hilarious, even if their only use lies in their entertainment value.
@ege824011 ай бұрын
@@pixellordm8780 humans are not perfect by any means. infact, we are filled with flaws. our bone structure is so fucked up its a wonder we can walk at all. and dont get me started on child birth
@pixellordm878011 ай бұрын
@@ege8240 never said humans were without flaw, there are boons & issues, that’s what i said. We are simply the only living thing that can grasp the world around us & perceive it all.
@2plus2equals9811 ай бұрын
“You think yours is long? Wait until you’ve seen mine.” is the most significant line in the entire video
@theshadows14168 ай бұрын
...this implies kermit is jesus as jesus took on the sins of every mortal in existance and also he called gover "my child"
@DrBright55588 ай бұрын
“He could not tell the difference ” carries more weight
@AAAAGGGGGHHHHsphere7 ай бұрын
@zenityracer75wait were still talking about stairs right?
@mintyreview67943 ай бұрын
Kermit is god, and he created the greatest sin. Life itself. Sin's birthplace.
@joemkdd3 ай бұрын
average locker room conversation
@TheRealKazberry11 ай бұрын
"He saw the birth of the universe, and he saw the heat death. And he could not tell the difference." is such mind-fuckingly good writing for a shitpost.
@ConfusedLemons9 ай бұрын
This is such a fucking masterpiece
@Eidako9 ай бұрын
Without a thought I will see everything eternal Forget that once we were just dust from heavens far As we were forged, we shall return perhaps someday I will remember us and wonder who we were - VNV Nation, "Further"
@LarryBarry399 ай бұрын
That final line was devastating.
@High-Overlord-Snarffie-Pug8 ай бұрын
holy shit, I randomly read this as it was said in the video, gave me a chill
@juliagoetia8 ай бұрын
@@Eidako Damn that goes hard
@Esitaro367011 ай бұрын
Ok but in all honestly, that part of Grover falling down to all eternity and not being able to die is the scariest thing i have ever heard
@joemorgan239010 ай бұрын
"Eventually, Grover stopped thinking."
@eragonawesome8 ай бұрын
Go read or listen to "I have no mouth and I must scream" if you want an even more intense version of that feeling
@Chad46557 ай бұрын
Can't wait till you discover hell
@dedmed81394 ай бұрын
Nah, it's edgy af and cringe
@matthummel83063 ай бұрын
@@dedmed8139 your pfp is cringe bro
@idiotsavant72767 ай бұрын
Dear Hollywood, This is how you tell a story.
@Connor_Kirkpatrick11 ай бұрын
Jury’s still out on whether or not Kermit was actually God
@ThefifthBishopofGord11 ай бұрын
Well Kermit actually could depending on how these work in the afterlife. As he has a staircase of his own which means he has to have sins. So not likely entirety of God if he is God. But he could possibly be Jesus as all sins were given to Jesus on the cross meaning his staircase would the largest by far and would explain how Gover has his own staircase and mentions no other and how Kermit is right there as he appears and gets up before Grover and calls him his child. Additionally God has extreme luminosity meaning that glow could be the Father and that puddle showed him because the Holy Spirit is inside everyone. So really to kill God in the first place you need to kill everyone but die and kill the last person in a way so that you don’t immediately get sent to Hell for suicide, kill the Son which is entirely different problem which solved itself in the story, and kill the Father which probably is the hardest because you have to climb a stair for every sin which includes the murder and also probably try not to go blind while doing all of this. Here is thing tho Grover never died as he entered through a portal so he could never ever possibly kill god as he didn’t die.
@user-pr6ed3ri2k11 ай бұрын
Trinity
@dai-nippon_digger11 ай бұрын
@@user-pr6ed3ri2kthe holy Trinity of Kermit, Kermitson, and Holy Kermit 😂
@Poindexterfredrick11 ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣 don’t forget jiminy fûçkêñ cricket lmao
@invalid_user_handle11 ай бұрын
I dunno, the way he spoke leads me to believe he was a former sinner turned angel, he climbed his own steps duitifully and confessed his regrets, and was given a second chance in the afterlife.
@tiewithnocollar303511 ай бұрын
A moment of silence to everyone who never finds this video
@the_beans_man152411 ай бұрын
real
@TrumpOfficialNot11 ай бұрын
Amen
@josephroszell11 ай бұрын
I appreciate that
@benderossett154311 ай бұрын
Got this recommended on KZbin without being subscribed. Don't worry! Someone will see it!
@MrLFJ711 ай бұрын
🙏
@chesterstevens887011 ай бұрын
I am in awe of this story. The drama, the growth; a tragic heroes' downfall as he realizes all he ever wanted, wasnt what he ever wanted at all. Truly a saga to rival Gilgamesh of Beowulf, you've outdone yourself Sir.
@Trynt3311 ай бұрын
The Gilgamesh of Beowulf is a pretty good saga, loved that crossover
@chickengod98858 ай бұрын
What does one of vergil's devilarms have to do with muppets?
@felixgutierrez9937 ай бұрын
Grover is for sure the Main protagonist but definitely not the hero
@kj123._.3 ай бұрын
I regret ever forgetting this story
@bendavis71697 ай бұрын
"Show me GOD!!"
@jothompson76108 күн бұрын
He already saw him, it was 𝐊𝐞𝐫𝐦𝐢𝐭
@devuljuice10 ай бұрын
“Grover saw the birth of the universe, and he saw the heat death. And he could not tell the difference”. No way a shitpost delivers one of the hardest lines I’ve heard
@Yu-Gi-Oh365086 ай бұрын
legit dont get the line and why everybody is saying "its so well-written!"
@basedokadaizo5 ай бұрын
@@Yu-Gi-Oh36508 i can attempt to explain: imagine, if you will, the birth of the universe as the "big bang". a massive explosion of so many energies, and so much of them, and in its terrifying wake, it leaves life. the heat-death of the universe is expected to be just as big a bang, but will leave no life in its wake-- but from far, far away, (let's say a Divine Creator's point of view), the life that first bang creates is so much smaller than something all-powerful, all-seeing, and all-knowing. it's so small, he can't see it. he can only see the explosions, the chaos, not what it will leave when the explosion has ended.
@EMlNENCJA5 ай бұрын
Just watch _history of the entire world, I guess_ looped on repeat long enough for Your mind to start blending the beginning & the end in Your perception. You will get it eventually ;)
@yazidefirenze3 ай бұрын
@@basedokadaizoAnother take: the birth and the death of the universe are just the same thing. The beginning is the end. The end is the beginning. Grover cannot tell if he has witnessed life's birth or life's death.
@donevanjordan92013 ай бұрын
@@Yu-Gi-Oh36508literally just look up the word entropy
@danielmarr29011 ай бұрын
BertStrip story writers are truly a special kind of Internet creators. They are able to create wonderful written insane stories, ranging from both comedy and tragedy, while having to use Muppet characters and screenshots as part of the story. Stuff like this genuinely takes talent, and blurs the line between art and s#$tpost.
@EverGreenRivers11 ай бұрын
Thank you, for informing me of the origins of this post. I will now dive into this rabbit hole.
@danielmarr29011 ай бұрын
@@EverGreenRiversGood luck. You're going to need it.
@YouveBeenMegged11 ай бұрын
“Blurs the line between art and shitpost” Who says it can’t be both?
@highpotencyiron452911 ай бұрын
You don't have to censor the word "shitpost" The youtube overlords are master ballbusters but they have SOME and I do mean some limit to their pettiness.
@danielmarr29011 ай бұрын
@@highpotencyiron4529 The funny thing is, the reason I censored it actually wasn't because of KZbin's stupidity, it was because I just didn't feel comfortable writing a curse word. I know that sounds ridiculous, especially since the video I'm praising isn't exactly the cleanest video on the site, and I would only be writing it down instead of actually saying it, but unless it's from a quote or title, writing curse words just doesn't feel right to me. I even tried to thing of other words to substitute the aforementioned word, but after some thinking, the word really was the best one to use in the sentence, so I used a censored version of it.
@Profile__111 ай бұрын
These feel like non-animated cutscenes in a really well done indie game that take place every time you complete a chapter.
@iamcerealman10211 ай бұрын
Reminds me of that game where you start in a prison with monsters lurking but if you manage to escape it's centuries of an endless desert because it's based on some form of afterlife hell. It has that indie click to continue vibe and I think I watched Markiplier play it probably a decade from now 😂
@C4xR3411 ай бұрын
@@iamcerealman102 I think I remember that game! Do you refer to "Antumbra"? I'm pretty sure there's a section like that in the game when he played it. His video was called "How to go insane | antumbra" if you want to look at it. Wow, this comment made me remember of such an old video, although I'm glad people remember it too.
@iamcerealman10210 ай бұрын
@@C4xR34 Yes it is that, thank you for remembering it
@alchemistofsteel809910 ай бұрын
It's like super paper mario
@gekinatracksuit97109 ай бұрын
ultrakill does this
@scoopishere78817 ай бұрын
“You’ve come a long way for your purpose, my child.” was almost exactly spot on with Jim Henson’s Kermit.
@CaptainBardiel3 ай бұрын
Sounds like Kai Winn.
@Cyphlix7 ай бұрын
This shitpost hit harder than the stairs
@mediocritysbest622011 ай бұрын
He has some great cardio. He was ascending those steps at a rate around 105 steps a minute
@The_scrongler197810 ай бұрын
New Vegas pfp spotted
@alexk96429 ай бұрын
probably why he was kicked down at first because there's no way he did that without atleast skipping 2 steps a second
@EnriqueLaberintico4 ай бұрын
That's slightly faster than All Star.
@potatomahonman50083 ай бұрын
He skipped a few though
@SweatEagle2 ай бұрын
What do you mean a minute? There is no time.
@fluff810211 ай бұрын
I thought Grover was going to shoot himself after realizing he became god.
@Poindexterfredrick11 ай бұрын
You weren’t the only one. Did grover bring the god gun?
@_karll_8 ай бұрын
same here
@striker89618 ай бұрын
Me too
@Kellethorn7 ай бұрын
In a manner of speaking... did he not? In assuming the mind of God, did Grover not determine the singular way to dispose of Him? That is to say... did Grover cast himself down to suffer the Eternal Curbstomp to save man from the eternal cycle of apotheosis and deicide? Let us not so hastily assume Grover's failure. Only in death, can He rise above all.
@gamingnanimatingwithm.s.n.70117 ай бұрын
I really wonder where the story would have went if he chose to do that.
@gusdotd89411 ай бұрын
Truly a work of art. The story grabbed me by the lapels from the very beginning, and wouldn't let go until its spine-tingling narrative drew its last word.
@mrfriespotato28349 ай бұрын
0:40 "he brought the glock with 'em" I literally chocked on my tea
@SugarbirdyOvO3 ай бұрын
'chocked'? I'm pretty sure you meant Glocked.
@Punkini11 ай бұрын
The perfect balance of jokes and existentialism. You made me both giggle like a schoolgirl and feel the same emotions as an animal taking its last breath as the jaws of a predator clench its trachea shut. Beautiful.
@the_buff_femboy11 ай бұрын
The most upbeat German fairy tale
@sgticecoldwater11 ай бұрын
Good Lord, I wasn’t expecting such an intricate story.
@Poindexterfredrick11 ай бұрын
Now they just gotta get morgan freeman to help Ulysses narrate the damn thing lmao
@TheGlippe11 ай бұрын
I liked it primarily because I would be the 666th like🤟
@duckymouth11 ай бұрын
This is unironically one of the best videos on KZbin. This will be a classic for years to come.
@TheXell8 ай бұрын
He's in hell. Not realizing that fact is part of his punishment.
@Mugen202411 ай бұрын
This, not ironically, is a high level of literature. And the voice is incredible
@SWIIIMS11 ай бұрын
That was incredible. Truly one of the greatest pieces of literature published in our modern era
@dragonluvver97511 ай бұрын
I love the implication that Kermit had also killed God. He wasn't the first two. By saying his staircase was much longer than Grover's implies his staircase has infinite sins as well for usurping God before. And just like Kermit, Grover usurped God and had to pay his own infinite torture. No wonder Kermit was already at the top.
@The_Preacher_of_Seraphiel11 ай бұрын
But God punished Grover
@augustus622411 ай бұрын
@@The_Preacher_of_Seraphiela new one, who had usurped him
@berrybeat11 ай бұрын
minor grammatical error 💀
@AndresHernandez-zw3ug11 ай бұрын
@@augustus6224You mean Grover got usurped afterwards?
@rezandrarizkyirianto-193310 ай бұрын
@@AndresHernandez-zw3ugGrover usurped God and became God. But he didn't know it. He willed himself to kill "God", which is himself. And so, Grover inadvertently did a cosmic suicide, and cast himself out of Creation
@MrWasian11 ай бұрын
I love how during the climb he committed 200 more sins LMAO
@sloshed-rat5 ай бұрын
Probably muttered 200 blasphemous phrases on his ascension.
@noisyphilosopherkrk5223 ай бұрын
@@sloshed-ratand how many of them do you think is him cursing God out like a damned sailor on steroids going ahab on Leviathan?
@ForumArcade11 ай бұрын
Can I just pay to have this man narrate everything from now on?
@Poindexterfredrick11 ай бұрын
Him and morgan freeman should voice everything from ATM’s to public self serve checkout machines lmao
@Queen_Cnidarian11 ай бұрын
The fact such a stupid concept had such phenomenal writing goes to show it’s really all in the execution.
@entothechesnautknight176211 ай бұрын
Yeah, this seems like the only voice appropriate for such a classical epic as "Grover steals a gun to kill god".
@dodsonboys11 ай бұрын
I like how memes went from goofy ms paint doodles and a baby with his fist up to a guy voice acting an existential tale of Grover killing and becoming god
@theraginginfernape949611 ай бұрын
"He saw the birth of the universe, and he saw the heat death, and he could not tell the difference" Such a raw fucking line I did not expect to find in this video
@swisschese13232 ай бұрын
Determination to kill God aside, Grover thinking he can kill God with a Glock is like black widow training to fight Thanos using pistols.
@MrCmon113Ай бұрын
God canonically loses a wrestling match against a normal bloke and then also loses a battle to iron chariots. I'm pretty sure a glock would kill him.
@euphorialover911Ай бұрын
@@MrCmon113canonically?!
@QxCooL11 ай бұрын
the second image implies grover skipped over 200 steps on his first climb, hence being declared a cheater
@georgelincolnrockwell624811 ай бұрын
Damn... Stairs Arc is by far the best arc of Groverlord we've seen since at least the Ultra Instinct arc.
@SuperNormalMan11 ай бұрын
Groverlord...lol.
@anglosaxiphone824611 ай бұрын
Don't forget Groverlords "Final Solution Arc". The arc with the most consequences that lead him to find god.
@georgelincolnrockwell624811 ай бұрын
@anglosaxiphone8246 I think you meant the 'best decisions' instead of 'most consequences'. 😏
@mrtortoise376611 ай бұрын
One must imagine Grover happy
@leandromadeireira884011 ай бұрын
Yes
@env0x11 ай бұрын
no. Grover is not human like we are, so our philosophy of stoicism does not apply in Grover's case. Grover isn't driven by happiness, Grover is driven by rage and resentment. happiness isn't what Grover is after, he's on a singular mission. and his will to push forward will not cease until that mission is accomplished.
@obrunolegal434011 ай бұрын
the myth of grover
@bluntweaponenjoyer11 ай бұрын
@@env0xnot gonna lie it’s kinda metal to imagine as a muppet as completely inhuman and driven only by malice, anger and a will to see everything burn
@birchberry935410 ай бұрын
@@env0xanger and rage can only exist within the context of an attempt to attain happiness, whatever definition of happiness that individual assigns. Without this context anger and rage serve no purpose for the individual having that subjective experience and they simply would not exist. They are behaviors dependent upon the causal force of a desire for subjective happiness. Grover believes killing god will make him happy, because he believes it is impossible for him to be happy having not killed god. His conclusion is an attempt to understand his own desire for happiness via process of elimination, if he cannot be happy with god then he can only be happy without him.
@tiredfellow2311 ай бұрын
"He saw the birth of the universe, and he saw the heat death. And he could not tell the difference." WHY DID SUCH A COLD ASS LINE COME OUT OF A FUCKING MUPPETS MEME
@DrBright55588 ай бұрын
It’s a good depiction of omniscience.
@Gfkd200121 күн бұрын
@@DrBright5558makes death sound so beautiful.
@opalpersonal11 ай бұрын
"but none of hit deterred grover. he brought the glock with him." nearly fucking lost it and choked to death on my drink at work 👍
@elephantpowerproductions11 ай бұрын
2:22 “We look to find ourselves, to see our own face. And we find the face of god.”-Scott Free/Mister Miracle
@Mutantvine11 ай бұрын
It's about damn time someone made a story about Grover that was in-character
@peterclarke724010 ай бұрын
Always knew he was a wrong'un.
@violet_turning_violent11 ай бұрын
The narration has such strange wording and tense that it makes me feel like I'm reading translated three times over ancient languages in fragments of a single myth. Like the part where he becomes God and Kermit was God but then when he is thrown down the steps by God, it is confusing and breaks the flow, but it kind of works I guess.
@thatbloomer564211 ай бұрын
To me, God is omnipresent. God is both Kermit and Grover. Though, at that time Grover still thinks he's a mortal. Therefore, he could still see the difference between him and himself. In a world, where time doesn't exist, there is no past or future, and the present erases both. Existence works the same way. There is no Grover or Kermit, there is only God, for all eternity.
@jimbo755111 ай бұрын
@@thatbloomer5642there is only God and the absence of God. Heaven and Hell.
@georgelincolnrockwell624811 ай бұрын
*SHOW ME GAWWWWWD*
@benzojamin439911 ай бұрын
Yeah, the odd grammatical items here and there are pretty jarring. Not unlike these comment replies that don't seem to get what you were talking about
@georgelincolnrockwell62489 ай бұрын
@@benzojamin4399 I bet you get a ton of pussy, don't you tiger?
@echo517211 ай бұрын
"He saw the birth of the universe, and he saw the heat death. And he could not tell the difference." RAW
@jamonsommer65103 ай бұрын
I like the idea that Kermit had committed his own sins, and in his own cycle of torment went to kill God, only to become what he went to destroy. So he planned the entire thing as a test to condemn Grover to the same fate, only for Grover to condemn himself to eternal death in the end, having become his own God. 10/10 to this existentialist masterpiece!🤯
@matterking1Ай бұрын
Why is biblical writing so freaking good? I'm not religious, but when a well written story about power, inmortality and the existence of an omnipresent being is handled well, it's really freaking awesome. God bless.
@RegalBlobАй бұрын
Yeh, as a Christian I REALLY respect a writer when they can accurately describe the incomprehensible power of a creature like that. I feel like out of any author H.P. Lovecraft does it the best.
@Anonymous_Badger11 ай бұрын
For eternity, Grover knew he would be stuck, watching the cycle for longer then eternity, for he was older then eternity itself, trapped in the shifting tides of the universe, knowing time had left him behind, forced to watch it start, and end, only to start again, for all of existence.
@Ultipey11 ай бұрын
"He saw the birth of the universe, and he saw the heat death. And he could not tell the difference." Is such a fucking good line, for a shipped about Grover from fucking SESAME STREET trying to kill god. All the writing is incredible!
@smellthel11 ай бұрын
Fun fact: In order to climb all those stairs on time Grover would have to step on one stair every 1.73 seconds.
I love how god never appeared and grover just flew out of heaven from some mysterious force
@Sarubadooru11 ай бұрын
The ending feels oddly calming to me, though it leaves to different interpretations (which is good). But I guess it depends on how you interpret difference becoming null. Either you accept it as something you can't change or you fight against it, even if the struggle is futile. And neither option is necessarily a bad one.
@TODDYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY11 ай бұрын
The ultimate heretic: Grover
@penguinguy216711 ай бұрын
But he has become God himself, does that mean he is still a heretic. This is truely one of the great questions of our time
@Aegis452111 ай бұрын
@@penguinguy2167truely?
@spookychungus9797Ай бұрын
Right along side *HIM*
@cloud-wr1hs11 ай бұрын
2:16 Chills, literal chills.
@kanyewestfan12411 ай бұрын
I think it took this story for me to truly understand what infinity is. What forever would be. “A second… a million years… all the same” is fucking chilling
@DrBright55588 ай бұрын
"He saw the birth of the universe, and he saw the heat death, and he could not tell the difference."
@tobyrightenger974810 ай бұрын
There was a monster at the end of this book. That monster was myself. If only I hadn’t turned that page
@ExtremeBirdTypography11 ай бұрын
Finally, a Grover story with a twist compelling enough to rival The Monster at the End of This Book.
@chrisgaming956711 ай бұрын
What's that? I haven't heard of it.
@Wolfyinasuit11 ай бұрын
I was looking for a comment about the book.
@Dies42011 ай бұрын
It’s a book about Grover and he’s scared because the title of the book says there’s a monster at the end, so he tries to stop you turning the pages and then it turns out that he was the monster at the end all along
@HeyItIsMichal9 ай бұрын
Somehow.
@triplehate67599 ай бұрын
@@Dies420 It also has a sequel with Elmo that basically runs through the same scenario.
@redeye451611 ай бұрын
Dante wishes he could've written something as great as this.
@lambda76011 ай бұрын
I like how "he was handed down ultimate power" suggests there's a more powerful, possibly more sadistic being than God.
@thatonejoey184711 ай бұрын
Saint Agustine in his philosophical writings on God stated that evil is not the opposite but the absence of God, if God was the sun, evil would be shadows were light cannot reach. So by performing the ultimate act of rejection, to seek to kill God himself (something even lucifer himself would not commit), he has been swallowed by the void itself, subjected to an eternal punishment with no hope of redemption as God's light will never reach him.
@telecorpse195711 ай бұрын
There is - God trying to kill himself, which is exactly what Grover is and what he does.
@WarhammerFan200211 ай бұрын
@thatonejoey1847 Wasn't the point of the war in heaven to kill God and for Lucifer to take his throne?
@spindash6411 ай бұрын
@@WarhammerFan2002 Yes, but that's not proof of God's vulnerability, just of Lucifer's arrogance and wrath, starting a war he knew was unwinnable, one with nothing to gain, and everything to lose
@invertebrado11 ай бұрын
@@WarhammerFan2002 yesn't. It was to prove a point, in simple terms.
@Blobert1432 ай бұрын
In 5th grade me and my friends wrote a story about Grover working with a race of inter dimensional oranges with legs to get rid of Elmo and achieve ultimate power by finding a weird octahedron is space. I’m adding this to the lore.
@JavierEmmanuelAlvarez7 күн бұрын
What was the full story?
@Blobert1436 күн бұрын
@@JavierEmmanuelAlvarez ok We made a google slides point and click called Elmo's woodland survival where Elmo (aged up) is on a plane to Alaska (parodying the book hatchet) when his plane mysteriously crashes. Grover is secretly doing rituals somewhere in the forest bc he just hates Elmo for some reason, teams up with orang from the bagel boy surreal memes series, and then in a second game, you meet stonks guy and an even older Elmo who has been living in the woods for 3 years and go on a quest to steal a magical octahedron that gives you godlike powers from Grover and Orang, who also set Elmo's shelter on fire and send a hydra with the face of my friend Sonny to kill you. We never finished the series because we kind of started drifting away but it was amazing.
@chris08crimson086 ай бұрын
The second form of humanity is a never ending fractal.
@tonybippitykaye11 ай бұрын
I came for the hilarious “every step is a sin you committed” line, but god I was not expecting existential dread near the end…
@satellitebreakfast11 ай бұрын
Ulysses narrating a story about Grover killing God was not what I expected to be the best video of 2023.
@phantomknightencounterist3 ай бұрын
If this was replaced with Joshua graham and the courier it would sound like Ulysses explaining a drug trip
@Maccycheez11 ай бұрын
I think this video poses an interesting question that I’ve never thought about before, “To an immortal being, does time even exist?” I think that it depends on whether or not the universe resets. An immortal being could count down the seconds to when the sun explodes, but if the universe were to reset, I doubt the being would care to. An immortal being could sit around for someone’s entire lifetime and watch them die, and the being would still be able to live a long enough time to forget that even occurred. That’s what makes us so pathetic I think, our reliance on time. We time out our day to ensure that we make it to work on time or that we have enough time to take the kids to band practice, or when will we expire. We have to waste our precious time doing things we don’t want to do in a life that we did not ask to be thrust into. Let’s hope that if the universe does reset, we do it right next time. I’ll be seeing you again soon.
@albertskoften145211 ай бұрын
I think the essence of immortality is immutability. Consider a toilet that, by some freak accident, has been flung into intergalactic space. It's moving at a constant rate, there's nothing around; no lights, no gravitational forces--nothing. Physically speaking, it is impossible to say (based purely on the toilet as an inertial reference frame) whether it's been there for twelve seconds or a million years. It doesn't change at all, so figuring out the change--which is the essence of time--is like dividing by zero. Regardless of the world around it, that toilet exists in a perfect eternal space. I don't think it's possible to be alive and immortal at the same time. Living means to change constantly. Even if you could make yourself functionally undying, your self and the world around you would always be shifting. You'd eventually become something totally dissimilar to how you started, which is the death of the idea of you--what some would call a soul. To live authentically means to accept that flow, come what may.
@Maccycheez11 ай бұрын
@@albertskoften1452 I love that and I love you, you smart cookie
@leandromadeireira884011 ай бұрын
My good, you two have some really hard existencial conversations.
@moosesues888711 ай бұрын
@@albertskoften1452I don’t think that changing is exclusive to living thing only tangible thing 😂 so a immortal being would just not be tangeable
@albertskoften145211 ай бұрын
@@moosesues8887 What precisely do you mean by "intangible"?
@colmmc3656 ай бұрын
He saw the birth of the universe. He saw the heat death. And he could not tell the difference. Cold. As F***. Line.
@lightlezs704810 ай бұрын
The sound design is insane in this video, such a vibe, I rewatched it like 5 times already.
@Pudding40411 ай бұрын
You know, in a way this plays out like a Seasme street episode in a way that you can take multiple lessons and messages out of it. That's the true beauty in this genius piece of literature.
@august676011 ай бұрын
This seems like the kind of thing you’d write while blacking out from mixing NyQuil and Red Bull together
@JerpyTH11 ай бұрын
This is a masterful work of art. and if this doesn't blow up in the next 48 hours, I'm gonna make Kermit's stairway look like 2 Legos.
@dr.coomerclone14619 күн бұрын
The stairs Polnareff climbed in part 3
@brandonhelcher3691Ай бұрын
A literal stairway to heaven, with its length and difficulty adjusted to match your sins, is actually a decent concept for purgatory. Redemption is possible, but proportionally challenging.
@4NSW3RM311 ай бұрын
What was the thought that pushed you to make this? Did you wake up and think "Grover really would want to pop a cap in God?" Did you see a blue jay's egg fall out of it's nest, shatter on the ground and think "It's all truly futile?" Did you hear "Elmo's got a gun" and think "I can top that?"
@august676011 ай бұрын
He did top it tho
@tomd969 ай бұрын
Philosophically, I see it as a reflection of mandkind's hubris. We lived off of the land, and when that wasn't enough, we set our sights on the stars. But those weren't enough. We had to see the universe. To know how it works, what makes it tick. When we grew tired of this limited existence, we wanted to transcend death. Science and everything we had learnt about the universe was for nothing. We saw past the fabric of reality and revealed the real innards. The universe was a test subject. A sick twist of fate. God's messengers were just his attempt at balancing the elaborate equation. Then, Grover woke up. The collective idea of a character from a children's show manifested itself out of the pure disgust, despair, and hatred shared by humanity, memes a tool of their will. He had a singular goal, no matter the obstacle: Kill God.
@prometheus97329 ай бұрын
@@tomd96You need to hired NOW. You are too talented to be a shitposter.
@E4439Qv58 ай бұрын
@@tomd96 Nietzsche: "..." "...First time?" -???
@memesthatmakeyouwannadie31338 ай бұрын
This Bertstrip is in line with Sartre and Kierkegaard. Grover revolts against the absurd but is punished by the real but uncaring God that watches humans struggle for naught. This is a universe far worse than one without any God. It is a cosmic terror.
@Pingi_Jaaj11 ай бұрын
"He saw the birth of the universe, and he saw the heat death. And he could not see the difference" goes so hard
@connorknutson605811 ай бұрын
“Do you think God stays in heaven because he too lives in fear of what he's created?” -Spy Kids 2
@Poindexterfredrick11 ай бұрын
If I were a space alien I’d stay the fûçk âwäÿ from earth and humans too lol
@Anarqism5 ай бұрын
0:16 big shot chord progression
@slashyboii96312 ай бұрын
Why can't I escape the funny man
@TheAuditorMomentАй бұрын
Kromer
@Kirbyfan86_27Ай бұрын
Big Shot you say
@TheAuditorMomentАй бұрын
@@Kirbyfan86_27 I think that perhaps it's now time to be a
@Kirbyfan86_27Ай бұрын
@@TheAuditorMoment Big Shot!
@invertebrado11 ай бұрын
Props on you on the music selection, the sound design is 50% of the reason this video is so great. The other 50% is the script and the other 50% is all the VA
@Alienrun10 ай бұрын
tfw the video is so good that you have 150% of reasons to justify it! :O
@frandurrieu647711 ай бұрын
Truly unhinged. Beautiful
@DJR64111 ай бұрын
If this was a video game, god would be the final boss, and this music would be his theme.
@kochanekwiary247011 ай бұрын
"Top 5 Games where the main character dies"
@maew15011 ай бұрын
for a joke story that was legit amazing. and your voice work just adds that special touch that ties it all together.
@seanryan302011 ай бұрын
Grover's a lot more intense than I remember him from when I was a kid 40 years ago!
@Frank-ro2xh11 ай бұрын
This is actually a good lesson on history telling , it draws you in and makes you feel invested on the history.
@Alienrun10 ай бұрын
Can you elaborate on this? How does it draw you in and what history?
@Frank-ro2xh10 ай бұрын
Pretty much the fact that grover has only one mission kill god but kermit stops him by pushing him . he doesnt stop right there he climbs again and his ambition keeps growing every Day he has to climb but he doesnt realize hes own mortality . Thats what grows on me and what makes it deep for me showing me what i struggle to write something similar but i can find the words for describing it , i know its a meme but a incredibly well writen one. 😅
@agoodmeme482311 ай бұрын
Kermit just casually kicks Grover down the stairs. That’s gotta sting
@Cameron098111 ай бұрын
This is an absolute masterpiece, this is what the internet was meant for.
@thaneofwhiterun356211 ай бұрын
The writing on this is actually fucking phenomenal. "He was still thinking like a Mortal, Grover knew." GRRM would be proud XD.
@RetiredAccount37372 ай бұрын
Anyone who wanted the music at 3:47 its Portal 1 Self Esteem Fund
@erinw.92567 ай бұрын
This is the most metal thing I’ve heard in a long time.
@Caligulashorse145311 ай бұрын
I’m not trying to kill God or anything but I strangely relate to the last part about time
@nicholas211311 ай бұрын
There's two sides to eternity, the side with Jesus Christ and the side without. One is known as hell and feels like it, one is known as heaven and feels like it
@Coffy-chan11 ай бұрын
I am trying to kill god and this is relatable.
@The_mrbob11 ай бұрын
@@nicholas2113 what about other religions
@kochanekwiary247011 ай бұрын
The Inquisition would like to know your current location@@Coffy-chan
@bagredecartola128911 ай бұрын
@@nicholas2113what if you're wrong? What if all religions are wrong? And what if even if you are all wrong, there is indeed a "god" somewhere, a being not defined by any human's beliefs, misteryous in nature
@chelli655511 ай бұрын
I accept this to be the holy scripture of my newly discovered religion. We worship grover and our goal is to aid him in his pursuit to defeat kermit and kill god.
@jb111082Ай бұрын
Allow me to be your first convert
@maxthompson71079 ай бұрын
The thing that terrifies me the most isn't the fact that Grover climbed a stairway with over a million steps at least twice and successfully killed god. It was that it was implied that Kermit had to climb a staircase that was somehow bigger. I don't think I want to know how how long it took Kermit to climb his stairway to Heaven. I don't know why, but that fact alone makes this version of Kermit somehow more terrifying than Grover.
@raylenn44449 ай бұрын
And yet....the frog was pushed down the stair like any other bloke by grover....
@spunkyspoogler8 ай бұрын
As Grover cries for the semblance of God, he sees Himself, in the puddle that is mirror on the ground. He looks down at his reflection, Himself, God. God is below him and he is God. God was already dead, dead when he set out this mission, dead as Kermit instigates the climb. There was never a living God, only Grover’s doltish oblivion shoving him back down.
@RolandEdrickSantos-jz7yp11 ай бұрын
A moment of silence to Grover the *god slayer*
@ww-ue7nj11 ай бұрын
Future historians believing this was a religious event:
@Granad7846 ай бұрын
It is
@DougDangerous11 ай бұрын
What strange, unholy thing have I seen and heard? This combination of sounds and visuals has shaken me to my core, and now I am uncertain in my quest to spit in God's face.
@spooklord525711 ай бұрын
Gonna save this in a random obscure playlist so I can confuse and slightly scare my future self. Thank you for the suggestion youtube
@pixiwix11 ай бұрын
What the Hell did I just watch and how did it find me...
@Trivial_Whim11 ай бұрын
That background industrial music is strangely compelling...