Is Enchanted On Netflix

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Leroy Turcios

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Aug 4, 2024, 1:48:27 PM8/4/24
to talichosge
Iwas blessed to take part in the brand new TV cooking competition called Crazy Delicious! Hosted by UK comedian Jayde Adams, we got to forage for ingredients in a stunning edible garden set and have our crazy & delicious creations tasted by the 'Food Gods' that are Heston Blumenthal, Niklas Ekstedt and Carla Hall.

Each week, three passionate and inventive cooks work magic with commonplace ingredients, such as the humble carrot, some of which they will pick, pluck and snip from an enchanted garden on the stunning Crazy Delicious set which also contains edible blossom, chocolate soil, and a drinkable babbling brook. Inspired by the vibrant and viral world of #foodporn, the competition challenges the cooks to create dishes that are both a taste sensation and a feast for the eyes.


Crazy Delicious is presided over by our world-renowned Gods of Food, Heston Blumenthal, Carla Hall and Niklas Ekstedt. The trio sit amongst the clouds and judge which ingenious cook will reign victorious and be awarded the golden apple.


This show was something super exciting for me - never had I cooked for Michelin star chefs before, let alone do it on TV! Despite the nerves, I really enjoyed taking part in this exciting new show and have met some really great people through it as well! I'm not normally used to cooking under time pressure and being watched with my every step, so this was definitely a new experience for me.


All right I went onto Netflix a moment ago, actually you are right. However, as I noticed there are actually two movies the enchanted parade, and the other one I cannot recall what Netflix did. Because I don't know the other movie title name and I think it is the prologue or just a movie before the TV series came out.


The first movie is actually a short film (26 min) from an anime festival and is just called "Little Witch Academia" (just like the series). The second film ("The Enchanted Parade" at 55 min) was produced based on a successful Kickstarter campaign. The series came later. All of them should be on Netflix, at least in the US.


Huh..as I came to realize..the first move I think it was a short film as you state or prologue of Little Witch Academia. As for the second film focuses on the Enchanted Parade and then after the television series came around.


At least the copyright owner of Little Witch Academia want this show to be worldwide. For one major reason, it is connected to Disney, family oriented, and age appropriate for all ages. So I do not expect Netflix to take down Little Witch Academia because the creator wants the show, and two short films to become world wide.


The Tide Mice are a type of magical creatures summoned by witches for people to grant them good luck, but eventually take their souls and give it to the witch. They play a key role in "Chapter 8: The Tide Mice". They do not appear in the graphic novels, but were created specifically for the animated series.


Tide Mice are often seen as small, oval-shaped brown mice with pink striped tails with strange traits such as bright, round eyes and red fur designs. They are usually invisible to everybody except the enchanter that summoned them, unless the enchanter uses the ritual to break the enchantment.


The tide mouse that Hilda gave her mother is oval-shaped and brown. It also has white, glowing eyes that have a yellow outline. It has circular brown ears, and a long pink striped tail. In contrast to David's tide mouse, Johanna's tide mouse was silent, and had it's entire lower body decorated in red markings, identical to those on the drawing Hilda used to summon it. This was since Hilda wanted this tide mouse to help her mom get a new graphic design job.


Next, they must put a personal object from this person, that symbolizes the expertise the tide mouse should enhance, in this net. For David, Hilda used his whistle, and for Johanna, she used a drawing.


After that, the enchanter leaves the item and the hair net until the light of dawn. Then, they run to check it the next morning, and they come across a soggy clump of hair swimming around in the tide pool. He or she will then pick it up, revealing the tide mouse.


The tide mice will be able to give the person it is attached to good luck in the beforehand selected expertise (singing for David, graphic design for Johanna) for a while. They often rest in different places on the person itself, such as in their hair, in their pockets, or even in their shirts.


Tide Mice can be summoned by humans with no magical experience. This makes the summoning enchantment especially dangerous, as novice enchanters are especially unlikely to appreciate the risk - or have read the warnings, which come after the instructions.


Although it may seem like tide mice are actually nice, harmless creatures, tide mice can actually steal the souls of the victims and forfeit them to the enchanter. Side effects can occur as well, including


To break the enchantment, the enchanted tide mouse must be returned by the end of a thirty day trial period. To do this, the witch or wizard must first say this chant out loud with vigor, which only works at moonrise:


After the chant is said, the disenchantment begins. This disenchantment, however, must be completed within an hour in order to take effect. The tide mice will leave their hosts and become visible to everybody. They must be caught and returned to the tide pool they were originally summoned from. There, the enchanter must place them in the water, and the victims must say this chant twice:


Finally, the enchanter must not forget to feed the tide mice a small piece of bread in order for the enchanter and the victims to be left in peace. This final step is tricky, since forgetting about it for even a little while will disrupt the disenchantment. When Hilda, Johanna, and David performed the disenchantment ritual at the end of "Chapter 8: The Tide Mice", Hilda eventually gave the Tide Mice their bread, but by that point she had already forgotten it long enough for the Mice to follow her home, and cause more trouble in "Chapter 11: The Jorts Incident".


Tide Mice that are not properly banished can bond with a new host and continue their work to extract a soul for the person that summoned them. In that case, an additional banishment ritual is required. Once Tide Mice are banished for good, they leave behind the hair and object originally used to summon them.


You might remember _9MOTHER9HORSE9EYES9, the anonymous user who enchanted thousands of readers with his eerie, Lovecraftian vignettes that envisioned terrifying space portals, Nazis, LSD experiments gone wrong, flesh interfaces, and a ubiquitous entity called "Mother."


Like so many others, I was instantly hooked. Yet, when I first wrote about 9M9H9E9, I briefly wondered if his posts (the author has self-identified as a "30-something American male") weren't just pieces of an extremely elaborate marketing stunt. After all, Reddit is no stranger to these tactics, and it's wise to take most internet phenomena with a hefty dose of skepticism.


Now, some readers are questioning whether we've all been given the runaround. You see, on the surface, the narratives of 9M9H9E9 look an awful lot like the plot of "Stranger Things," a new Netflix series that debuted last week. Interdimensional travel? Check. References to MK-ULTRA, the CIA's illegal mind control program? Check. Flesh interfaces??? Shockingly, check.


Since April, the universe of 9M9H9E9 has expanded, and a growing legion of nearly 7,000 users now frequents a subreddit called "The Interface Series" to share theories, artwork, related texts, and their own fanfiction. Even Motherboard's science fiction hub Terraform joined in, publishing an original feature by 9M9H9E9 titled "The Flesh Interface."


"Yes, there are similarities, but it's only surface ones. Stranger Things even mentions Stephen King in Episode 6. By that reference they admit that it is not new literary territory. They seemed to have borrowed more from King & Spielberg in their story. They have the LSD and MKULTRA, telekinesis & telepathy," one of the subreddit's mods, GabbiKat, told me in a private message.


"MHE [9M9H9E9] and I even had a laugh about it, neither of us having watched or heard of the story until it came out. We'd been planning the ending for a few weeks, going back and forth on how to end it, and I enjoyed seeing my idea and his become the ending we now have."


Where 9M9H9E9 forays into cosmic rifts and psychedelic epiphanies, the plotline of "Stranger Things" focuses of telekinesis and telepathy. "MHE wrote more along biblical lines, strange dimensions, segmentation, Nazi experiments, and Mother (who is not a weird monster, but instead some form of a demigod), and Q," GabbiKat added.


It's also important to note that production of "Stranger Things" began back in 2015, and if this were truly a viral marketing campaign, it failed to promote anything other than a lively, albeit niche, internet community.


However, in all fairness, here's an alternate theory: The author of 9M9H9E9 was, or still is, a writer for "Stranger Things," and the anonymous fiction is their secret side project. "The Interface Series" is the stuff that fell on the cutting room floor. (Probably not, but on the internet, do you ever really know?)


Regardless, the haunting reign of 9M9H9E9 is over for now, and all that remains is some seriously great fiction. According to GabbiKat, the subreddit doesn't appear to be going anywhere, though some of its moderators have chosen to take a break from the community now that 9M9H9E9 has passed into the beyond.

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