The word “creepypasta” comes from the internet word “copypasta,” which, in itself, comes from the words “copy paste.” Basically, it’s a story that gets plastered all over the internet. Creepypastas are the same idea, but with horror stories. Some of these horror stories do have a grain of truth, but for the most part, they are entirely fictional.

RELATED:10 Best Halloween Episodes That You Can Binge Year-Round, According to IMDbThough, that doesn’t make them any less terrifying. With fans from all aspects of pop culture populating the internet, it is only natural that some of these stories will be about TV shows, whether the shows in question were real or not.

Happy Appy addresses his audience

Happy Appy

Happy Appywas the title of a fictional Nick Jr. show that aired only briefly in 1999, but was quickly taken off the air. The show featured a main character that resembled a clay apple held up by a popsicle stick. The entire premise of the show was that Appy would go around visiting kids who were hurt or sick and give them fruits or band-aids to help them feel better. The show was meant to teach kids how to deal with real-life situations that they would often face.

As the show went on however, things gradually became darker. Appy went from a clay apple on a popsicle stick to a freaky demon apple on a rusty iron spike who would stare deeply into the camera in complete silence for uncomfortably long periods of time. The show turned kids getting minor boo-boos into kids being injured in tragic accidents and in often gruesome ways.

An actual ‘The Simpsons’ image from a Treehouse of Horror scene where the ghost of Bart sits up from his dead body and states “hey, cool, I’m dead!"

This lost episodeofThe Simpsonsstarts out fairly ordinary. It begins with the Simpsons family taking a plane trip overseas, and Bart (Nancy Cartwright) is fooling around as usual. This time, however, there are deadly consequences. Bart breaks the plane window and is sucked out, falling to the ground below.

RELATED:The Simpsons Treehouse of Horror Episodes, RankedThe episode ends with Bart’s funeral. What’s creepy is that the graveyard is filled with tombstones marking people who have guest starred on the show, some of whom hadn’t even been featured yet, includingMichael Jackson. What’s even creepier is that the dates of their deaths are also listed on the headstones, all of which are correct, even if the person in question wasn’t dead at the time. The whole episode was obviously much scarier than anythingTreehouse of Horrorhas ever offered.

One of the freaky puppet characters of ‘Candle Cove’

Candle Cove

This one is so creepy because there are apparently a handful of people who actually do remember watching it.Candle Covewas ostensibly a TV show broadcast only on local stations. People only started talking about it when someone posted about it on an online forum, and was met with other people who shared similar memories. Or at least,that’s how the story goes.

RELATED:10 Scariest Horror Movies That Are Too Disturbing To Re-WatchThe show was about pirates, but the characters were much too dark to be shown on children’s television. On top of that, there is an extension of the story that may not necessarily be true, but that sure is creepy. Some versions of the story involve kids having recurring nightmares or becoming ill as a result of the show. What’s more, the parents of said children who may or may not exist attest that the kids weren’t watching anything at all, just a screen full of static.

Promotional image for ‘Ed, Edd n Eddy’

‘Ed, Edd n Eddy’ Lost Episode

The classicNickelodeonshowEd, Edd n Eddywas extremely popular in the 90s and 00s, and fills many with nostalgia even to this day. However, there is a story that there was a lost episode which many people apparently remember watching, and took to online forums immediately after the episode aired to discuss it.

The episode consisted of a series of still frames in terrible quality. The first featured Eddy (Tony Sampson) with a murderous look on his face, complete with red eyes, who leads Ed (Matt Hill) down the street. Ed is crying. Other shots show Edd (Sam Vincent) lying in his bed, crying, and one of the characters being swallowed by a baby who suddenly emerges from underneath the couch.

Squidward appear against a black background. His eyes are enlarged and cry black tears with bloodshot irises. A layer of static covers the whole image.

Squidward’s Death

A show as popularamong both kids and adultsasSpongebob Squarepantsis bound to be rife with many horror stories written by fans. However,there is one that sticks out the most among the others. The story concerns a Nickeloden intern who is selected to view a Spongebob episode before it airs. What he sees disturbs him.

RELATED:9 Shortest Nickelodeon MoviesSquidward (Rodger Bumpass) has actually landed himself a gig and is performing in Bikini Bottom that night. The first thing that sticks out to the intern is that every character has photorealistic eyes, which make for a pretty creepy image. Squidward performs, and is booed by the entire town. He cries and goes home as demonic whispers and faint laughter play in the background. Disturbing video archival footage from goodness-knows-where is briefly shown, and by the end of the episode, Squidward is dead in a very graphic manner.

‘Tom and Jerry’ Lost Episode

Tom and Jerryis one of the oldest and most successful cartoon series of all time, so it’s no wonder that it has so many fans. Especially some who are willing to write scary stories about the show. Like many TV creepypastas, the story concerns a lost episode in which Tom’s owner begins deliberately hurting the poor cat when he is caught trying to enter her basement.

Jerry begins to take pity on Tom for once, and kills his owner. They then carry her body down to the basement, which is when it is revealed that there are other bodies in the basement. Jerry then kills Tom, and puts the house up for sale, grinning and laughing the entire time.

The Gurgles and Bugman Show

This creepypasta concerns another fictional show, this time featuring a freaky-deaky clown named Gurgles and his companion, Bugman, a hunchbacked man with the head of a fly. Most of the show involved them playing harmless pranks on people as they went about their nightly routines, but it always ended with Bugman sucking the blood of an unsuspecting victim while they slept. Heavy laughtrack was always played over this gruesome scene.

The writer states he saw the show when he was a boy, and that his classmate had died one day, and he believed he couldn’t have because he saw him onThe Gurgles and Bugman Showthe night before. It was then that he realized what was actually happening on the show, and he never watched it again.

Channel Infinity

TheChannel Infinity creepypastais part of a subgenre known as ritual creepypastas. Basically, they’re a series of stories involving rituals, similar to the Bloody Mary story that many hear as children. This ritual isn’t about any particular show, but does involve the use of a hidden TV channel that leads to an alternate dimension.

After performing the long and elaborate ritual, it is said that Channel Infinity will then become available to the viewer, which contains shows all about some pretty life-changing topics that will make any who view them succeed immensely. However, there are risks. For one, part of the ritual involves watching an altered version of your favourite show where every character you love dies in a horrific manner. Another risk is that when you are pulled into the alternate dimension, you have a chance of being killed by the beings that inhabit it.

The ‘Rugrats’ Theory

Okay, so this one is technically a theory, but it’son an official Creepypasta website, so it still counts. The short version is that none of the characters from theoriginal seriesofRugratsreal, and that all of them were made up by Angelica (Cheryl Chase). The other kids apparently all died in horrific tragedies, which explains the behaviour of some characters.

For example, the theory states that Chuckie (Nancy Cartwright) died along with his mother, which is why Chuckie’s father is such a nervous wreck.

12 Minutes

This fictional story focusses on an Atlanta-based news channel having an empty time slot, and filling it with a religious talk show with a local Reverend. Every twelve minutes exactly, the Reverend would receive a call from a woman complaining of illness as a result of watching his show. This carried on for months until viewership dropped and the channel pulled the show to focus on the mysterious epidemic plaguing the city, which many claim was caused by the show.

An intern decided to view the tapes searching for potential causes. When he paused the tapes every twelve minutes, he found that inserted into the tape was a single frame of a disembodied head. When he edited all the frames together, he noticed that the head appeared to be talking. A few weeks later, he was found in his home after having murdered his wife, mumbling unintelligibly under his breath.

KEEP READING:10 Terrifying True Story Horror Movies That’ll Have You Sleeping With The Lights On