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Tag: willy wonka

  • The ‘Meth Lab Oompa Loompa Lady’ Is Selling Greetings on Cameo for $25

    The ‘Meth Lab Oompa Loompa Lady’ Is Selling Greetings on Cameo for $25

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    The ‘Meth Lab Oompa Loompa Lady,’ whose real name is Kirsty Paterson, has been through a lot over the past week, but even she wasn’t ready for the latest twist in her story. After being forced to learn an AI-generated script for a disastrous Willy Wonka-themed event in Scotland and facing hordes of hate on X/Twitter, Paterson got a message from someone she never expected: Chrissy Teigen.

    “Somebody get the Wonka meth lab girl on Cameo immediately—while it’s still hot,” Teigen said in a recent Instagram story. “I need a Cameo.”

    Teigen got her wish, as well as one of Paterson’s first videos on Cameo, a platform where users can buy personalized videos and text greetings from all types of celebrities. Paterson currently charges $25 for video greetings and $3 for texts. Her response time is 24 hours.

    How the ‘Meth Lab Oompa Loompa Lady’ Turned Into an Internet Meme

    The 30-year-old actress from Glasgow saw her life turned upside down by the failed “Willy’s Chocolate Experience” event in the city last month, which was promoted with fantastical AI-generated images of lollipop forests and jellybean waterfalls.

    However, the reality was a far cry from what was promised in the AI images. Instead of the “place where chocolate dreams become reality,” parents and their children encountered a dirty and gutted factory with a couple of plastic candy canes and other props sparsely thrown about the bare concrete floor.

    Paterson was one of the actors hired to work at the event and played an Oompa Loompa. In an interview with Vulture, the 30-year-old shared that she saw multiple red flags before the event, such as getting the script the night before the event and seeing a bared-bones set during dress rehearsal. The situation didn’t improve the day of the event, Paterson recalled, and organizers eventually told actors to abandon the script and just let the guests walk through the venue.

    At this point, the actress was manning a so-called “Jellybean Room,” where she had to ration a meager three jellybeans per child, and feeling humiliated and angry over what was going on. It was then that someone snapped the now infamous photo of Paterson standing behind what looks like a smoking chemistry set with an expression that seemed to say she was questioning her current life choices.

    The photo quickly went viral and got its own entry on KnowYourMeme. While some people poked fun at Paterson, others were needlessly cruel, criticizing her appearance and accusing her of doing drugs. The Twitter comments were hard on the actress, who said she stopped looking at her phone for days because the situation was “too much.”

    “The comments are savage—very, very savage and not very nice. I think people need to learn to be a bit more kind and realize that people are just human beings,” Paterson said in a video on TikTok, where she’s already amassed more than 13,000 followers. “I’m just a normal 30-year-old woman from Glasgow who did a job that is the worst acting job I’ve ever done in my life. I love my job. I really do. I do other stuff and the whole thing’s mental to be honest with you.”

    Creating a Cameo for the ‘Viral Oompa Loompa’

    That doesn’t mean Paterson hasn’t gotten a kick out of some of the comments and memes. The actress said she and the other actors have laughed at some of the funny aspects coming out of the Wonka disaster. Paterson said she’s now working on trying to turn the experience into something positive.

    Her new fans on social media support her. When Paterson, dressed in her Oompa Loompa costume from the event, announced she was now on Cameo on Monday night, many users were delighted. Some told her to go “make that money.”

    As of Tuesday morning, one of the most popular comments was a question on whether Paterson would do a Cameo collab with The Unknown, an evil and creepy-looking character at the event who also went viral. The identity of the actor who played The Unknown is currently, lol, unknown.

    “Maybe one day!” Paterson replied.

    We’ll be waiting.

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    Jody Serrano

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  • The Only Thing Funnier Than the Nightmare Willy Wonka Experience Is the Memes

    The Only Thing Funnier Than the Nightmare Willy Wonka Experience Is the Memes

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    The internet’s latest obsession is the Willy Wonka-inspired event that went terribly wrong in Glasgow. Unsurprisingly, the memes on the epic failure have not disappointed.

    Readers have been struggling to wrap their minds around how Willy’s Chocolate Experience by the House of Illuminati backfired so badly that the police were called. The event was scheduled for February 24–25 and was marketed as a “visually stunning and intricately designed setting inspired by Roald Dahl’s timeless tale.” Images of the event promised that attendees would actually be walking through a replica of Wonka’s iconic and whimsical chocolate factory. There were promises of sweet treats and live performances, with images suggesting that viewers could visit the “Imagination Lab” and “Twilight Tunnel,” bursting with color and imagination. Visitors paid roughly $44 per ticket, and some traveled hours, believing they would soon be inside those images in a surreal experience.

    However, none of those images were actual pictures or illustrations personally designed for the event; they were all AI-generated. Families were horrified when they arrived in a near-empty warehouse with sparse decorations where each child received a single jelly bean and a quarter cup of lemonade. Willy Wonka’s actor was given a 15-page script filled with AI-generated gibberish, and another actor terrorized children by portraying a creature called “The Unknown.” The police showed up, and House of Illumination was forced to shut down the event early and issue an apology and numerous refunds.

    Of course, the internet was instantly captivated by this surreal story, and it wasn’t long before the memes started coming.

    The Willy’s Chocolate Experience memes have arrived

    Willy Wonka is currently trending on X. However, the posts aren’t about the franchise or the recent hit movie Wonka. Instead, they are almost all exclusively about the epic failure of Willy’s Chocolate Experience.

    Many users have been taken with the idea of this nondescript, creepy warehouse housing The Unknown and have begun imagining what else could be hiding in there. Users have already linked Willy’s Chocolate Experience with the supposed disappearance of Kate Middleton and created dozens of “breaking news” headlines about spottings of random or obscure celebrities and characters at the warehouse. It’s only fitting that the Princess of Wales, Hannibal Lector, a plague doctor, and a tater tot selling Reba McEntire would make an appearance.

    Users have also found videos and pictures that perfectly represent the dumpster fire that the event was. Any sad or lonely-looking things in a warehouse or depictions of scared and sad humans are a pretty good representation of what went down. Many have also recognized that the event is essentially the real-life version of Krabby Land.

    One user also tried to imagine who the creator of Willy’s Chocolate Experience was. It had to have been someone truly diabolical.

    It remains to be seen who or what else will be spotted lurking in the depths of the Willy Wonka meth lab/warehouse with The Unknown and how many ways the internet will find to creatively express the horror of the experience.

    (featured image: Warner Bros.)

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

    Rachel Ulatowski

    Rachel Ulatowski is an SEO writer for The Mary Sue, who frequently covers DC, Marvel, Star Wars, YA literature, celebrity news, and coming-of-age films. She has over two years of experience in the digital media and entertainment industry, and her works can also be found on Screen Rant and Tell-Tale TV. She enjoys running, reading, snarking on YouTube personalities, and working on her future novel when she’s not writing professionally. You can find more of her writing on Twitter at @RachelUlatowski.

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    Rachel Ulatowski

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  • Wonka’s Saccharine Tincture Will Give Those With Functional Tastebuds A Stomach Ache

    Wonka’s Saccharine Tincture Will Give Those With Functional Tastebuds A Stomach Ache

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    It is said that one is supposed to get more jaded (read: wiser) with age. That’s obviously not so with director Paul King, best known to most as the writer-director of Paddington and Paddington 2. But to those who really know his style before it became obfuscated by the sugary sweet stylings of those two films, it was Garth Marenghi’s Darkplace and The Mighty Boosh that lifted King up the ranks of British pop culture. Indeed, those two works were undeniably his launching point for writing and directing his own full-length feature, Bunny and the Bull, released in 2009, two years after The Mighty Boosh ended (but that didn’t stop Noel Fielding and Julian Barratt from appearing in King’s debut). 

    By aligning himself with the “quirk” and “offbeat stylings” of these two series, perhaps it became too easy to forget that he didn’t write them. That his own sense of “quirk” and “offbeatness” was entirely different. Entirely more attuned to the, shall we say, saccharine. And while that trait worked quite well for Paddington and Paddington 2, when applied to Wonka, it’s liable to give anyone with working tastebuds a stomach ache. Alas, it appears as though few people have their sense of taste at all anymore, with critics largely praising the movie via such sentiments as “Chocolate Factory prequel is a superbly sweet treat.” Many also seem to think that eradicating all traces of Road Dahl’s signature brand of darkness and cynicism is just dandy. As many also thought the same about censoring his work and then reprinting it for the purposes of adhering to “sensitivity reading.” In fact, in the same review that calls Wonka a “superbly sweet treat,” it is also said, as though it’s a good thing, “Timothée Chalamet leads a beguiling cast in a backstory that rinses away all sourness from Roald Dahl’s embittered chocolatier.” Does anyone care that that’s actually the worst possible interpretation of Willy Wonka, “origin story” or not? And, if Wonka is the so-called origin story it claims to be, where exactly is the part that’s supposed to tell us how he eventually came to be the child-hating (though that’s just good sense) misanthrope that we see him as in Gene Wilder form? Or hell, even in Johnny Depp form (to be sure, it’s been a real surprise to find that Tim Burton’s 2005 adaptation of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory is more redeemed now than ever as a result of Wonka‘s existence). What’s more, at least Depp’s Wonka had an actual origin story involving his father being an oppressive dentist who would never let him eat any candy, hence his adult enthusiasm for making it.

    The absence of darkness (or what darkness there is being presented with a sense of “levity”) in Wonka begs the question: are people so starved for blind hope in the world that they can view the movie as a “much needed” beacon of light rather than taking note of how it not only eliminates the essence of Willy Wonka, but also inflicts a sort of terrified Pavlovian response every time one can feel another song coming on? Especially when it’s from Chalamet. To that point, there’s clearly a reason why the trailer for the movie did its best to conceal the fact that Wonka is a musical. Should viewers have expected that thanks to 1971’s Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory? Perhaps. But one of many glaring differences between that version and this “companion piece,” as King calls it, is that the songs in the original film actually slap, while the ones in Wonka are either totally forgettable (save, of course, for the few they repurpose from Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory) or you wish they would please, god, please just end. This includes Calah Lane, who plays the “orphaned” Noodle, and Chalamet singing the ultra-cheeseball “For a Moment,” featuring such lyrics as, “For a moment/Life doesn’t seem quite so bad/For a moment/I kind of forgot to be sad.” Worse still are Wonka’s attempts at rhyming Noodle’s name with something, as he claims nothing rhymes with “Noodle” (clearly forgetting about “canoodle”), but, in truth, nothing rhymes with Wonka unless you turn “donkey” into “donka.” As in: Wonka sucks donka dick, and is a major insult to Dahl’s original character. One who would never, no matter how young and unjaded, sing, “Noodle, Noodle, apple strudel/Some people don’t and some people do-dle/Snakes, flamingos, bears and poodles/Singing this song will improve your moodle/Noodle-dee-dee, Noodle-dee-dum/We’re having oodles and oodles of fun.” If that doesn’t make one vomit into a bucket, it’s hard to know what will. Apart from King and his co-writer, Simon Farnaby (another The Mighty Boosh alum), incorporating a mama’s boy element into the script. 

    That’s right, of course Willy is suddenly a mother-obsessed man-boy who only dreams of making chocolate and selling it at the Galeries Gourmet because that’s what he told his mother (Sally Hawkins) he would do. She, in turn, promised she would be right at his side whenever he finally did. Unfortunately, her untimely death makes that all but impossible. That is, if this were a more realistic film. But again, as the critics have praised, Wonka utterly whitewashes and sanitizes everything for the sake of “effortless consumption.” Even the overt intermingling of Black and white characters at a time in history (“fantasy” or not) that wouldn’t have made it look so natural is yet another major signal of the movie’s overall sanitization. This being part of a larger trend in pop culture that might end up doing more harm than good in the long run as audiences are encouraged to pretend that racism never existed, and therefore doesn’t even exist now. 

    Nor does any trace of Dahl’s wryness. And sure, Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory will always have the unbeatable benefit of being adapted for the screen by none other than Dahl himself (though he later disowned the script after it was given an uncredited rewrite by David Seltzer and then altered by director Mel Stuart). Not to mention the dark edge of Wilder portraying Wonka. In Paul King’s version, it isn’t just the unbearably corny nature of everything that makes it insufferable, but also the dreadful miscasting of Chalamet (and Hugh Grant as an Oompa Loompa, for that matter), who makes Wonka read like an impish, dick-gobbling (remember: Wonka sucks donka dick) twink. Really, it looks like he just ate a big mouthful of shit from someone’s arse every time you see him…which doesn’t do much to make the chocolate in the movie seem appetizing. 

    Beyond that issue, there’s the wielding of the town’s Chief of Police (Keegan-Michael Key) as a source of “comedy” for being fat. A big “no-no” in today’s world, and one of the many details that have actually been extracted from Dahl’s books (that is to say, even mere use of the word “fat”). Nonetheless, the Chief of Police is portrayed as a weak-willed fatso who becomes fat because he’s being paid off in chocolate bribes by the Chocolate Cartel (not exactly high praise or good PR for the candy biz). This group consists of Arthur Slugworth (Paterson Joseph), Gerald Prodnose (Matt Lucas) and Felix Fickelgruber (Mathew Baynton), all clearly based off Boggis, Bunce and Bean, the greedy triumvirate from a different Dahl story, Fantastic Mr. Fox (which Wes Anderson did a far better job of adapting than King has done with Wonka). Another “nod” to a Dahl story is Noodle, so overtly the “Matilda figure” of this narrative. But rather than succeeding as a “heartfelt homage” to Dahl’s work, Wonka is more like a hodgepodge of saccharine candies you didn’t really want, but you guess you’ll gorge on them because they’re there. 

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Sweets for the Sweet! 22 Colorful Gifts for Candy Lovers

    Sweets for the Sweet! 22 Colorful Gifts for Candy Lovers

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    The new Wonka—an origin story for Roald Dahl’s trickster chocolatier starring Timothée Chalamet, Olivia Colman, and Hugh Grant—is a world of scrumdiddlyumptious wonders and dream sequences to stir mirth. Take that as a sweet nougat of inspiration when selecting just the right treat for the sweetie pie in your life. Whether a cotton candy–toned teddy bear, a glass candy jar that wouldn’t look out of place atop a cake, gumdrop charms, or a bow tie of which the chocolate maker himself would surely approve, gift giving this season will feel like finding a Golden Ticket.

    All products featured on Vanity Fair are independently selected by our editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

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    Arimeta Diop

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