Finally, The Internet Found ‘The Backrooms’

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By Dani Di Placido for Forbes - 30 May 2024
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The original photo that inspired the Backrooms creepypasta and memes | 4CHAN

Internet sleuths finally found the real location of “the Backrooms,” tracking down the original photo that first inspired the memes, creepypastas and many works of fiction.

What Is ‘The Backrooms’?​

The Backrooms is a piece of digital folklore, an ethereal place that exists beyond the borders of our world, that can supposedly be entered by "noclipping" through reality, like a player shifting through the wall of a glitchy video game.

The Backrooms resembles an empty office space, illuminated by sickly yellow lights that constantly flicker and hum. The stale carpet and sprawling rooms are said to smell of damp; the profound isolation is broken only by the presence of shadowy monsters.

Like Slenderman, the Backrooms started life as a creepypasta, a horror-themed internet legend that has entered into popular culture, inspiring countless posts, stories, games, videos and artworks.

The influence of the Backrooms can also be seen in related trends such as “Liminal Spaces” and “Dreamcore.”

How Did ‘The Backrooms’ Meme Begin?​

Like many of the internet’s most enduring memes, the Backrooms was birthed on 4chan, on the paranormal discussion board known as “x.”

In May 2019, an unknown 4chan user prompted his fellow anons to post “disquieting images that just feel ‘off,’” and one of the responses contained the now-iconic photograph of an unsettling office space.

The distinctive lore of the Backrooms was composed in the replies, and spread to the rest of the internet from there.

For many, the idea of an abandoned office with a menacing, otherworldly aura proved an oddly familiar concept.

Something about the image seemed to invoke fear and nostalgia — many have equated the popularity of the Backrooms to shared childhood memories of entering empty office and retail spaces.

For years, the Backrooms was kept alive by horror stories, languishing on Reddit, but was revitalized by ambitious YouTube videos directed by VFX artist Kane Pixels, which helped push the concept into the mainstream.

The Backrooms has since broadened almost beyond recognition, inspiring increasingly convoluted lore and many references on TikTok, YouTube and Roblox.

The source of the original image, however, remained a mystery.

Where Did The Original ‘Backrooms’ Photograph Come From?​

While the original 4chan post that inspired the meme was from 2019, a team of Discord users determined to source the photograph found that it had first appeared on 4chan in 2011.

While the image has no defining characteristics that would clue internet sleuths to its true location, the 2011 post was traced to a tweet from 2019 which casually revealed the original Backrooms location, but had been ignored by the rest of the internet.

The link in the tweet was broken, but sleuths used the Internet Archive to access the site, uncovering a 2003 blog post detailing the renovation of a HobbyTown store in Oshkosh, Wisconsin.

In a spooky little twist, every image on the archived blog post is missing, except for the Backrooms image and another photo of the same room, taken from another angle.

Internet sleuths dug even deeper, and managed to find a black-and-white photo of the room back when it was a furniture store.

Ironically, the photo that inspired the Backrooms was, quite literally, taken in the back rooms of the store — it has since been converted into an RC racing track, the fluorescent yellow replaced with clean, white interiors.

Following the discovery of the real location, some commentators declared the Backrooms trend dead, the end of an era.

The Backrooms, however, has become too popular to die — the otherworldly realm has become part of internet history, and will always exist in musty, unused office spaces with a weird vibe.
 
Just like SCP, it's another fun little niche thing from /x/ that was completely coopted by fags and trannies.
"My abstract, indescribable-but-totally-scary-please-trust-me thing can beat up your abstract, indescribable-but-totally-scary-please-trust-me thing! And something something time loops and multiverses!"
 
The scariest thing about the original image is the color of the lighting. It's nauseating. Imagine working under lighting that color. Is it any wonder people used to bitch non-stop about those old florescent lights from the 70's-90's that were that color and hummed all the time? I can easily see why it drove people nuts. Everything in that color of lighting would do that to anyone.
 
Liminal Spaces are terrifying, but it's a very deep, very slow, very psychological horror that's precisely the same kind of horrifying as the uncanny valley. Some part of your amoeba brain recognizes an empty airport with the same concern as a suddenly quiet field, something pretending to be human as a mimicking threat, a sophisticated wrongness that proceeds the typical awful hackneyed gore that most horror movies sink to.

You got to understand, Zoomers have been plagued by shit that fundamentally isn't scary their entire lives. Jump scares, gore, animatronic monsters, they've been told about the spooky backrooms and then it's a wacky wet carpet with monsters that tongue your butthole. Is it any surprise that when you put them into an empty school they have 0 tolerance for the slow stuff?
That's where the true horror of Liminal Spaces and vids like "Places you've seen in your nightmares" is. It's in that unsettling feeling that something about this place is just not right. Maybe it's for obvious reasons, or maybe it's for reasons you can't quite articulate/put your finger on. It's the fear that while you seem to be alone (scary in and of itself), the real fear is that you might not be alone in this weird space. It's that lingering anticipation and tension that builds as you wander though a strange place that you don't understand, waiting for some thing to present itself as a threat...but that tension never gets broken.

It's not in "OOOOH, SP00PY MUNSTER!!!!" with a jumpscare and some really bad design that's not scary but actually goofy when you get a good look at it.
 
Some part of your amoeba brain recognizes an empty airport with the same concern as a suddenly quiet field, something pretending to be human as a mimicking threat, a sophisticated wrongness that proceeds the typical awful hackneyed gore that most horror movies sink to.
Meh. I still think people are only "twitchy" about empty airports because of The Langoliers. Granted, in that particular case there actually was a looming threat -- literal time jannies (lol the FF7 remake had no original ideas) coming to eat them -- but that kind of thing is 1) fictional and 2) only a concern if you're at an airport in Maine.

Actual empty airports are fuckin' cool.
 
Some part of your amoeba brain recognizes an empty airport with the same concern as a suddenly quiet field, something pretending to be human as a mimicking threat, a sophisticated wrongness that proceeds the typical awful hackneyed gore that most horror movies sink to.
That's where the true horror of Liminal Spaces and vids like "Places you've seen in your nightmares" is. It's in that unsettling feeling that something about this place is just not right. Maybe it's for obvious reasons, or maybe it's for reasons you can't quite articulate/put your finger on. It's the fear that while you seem to be alone (scary in and of itself), the real fear is that you might not be alone in this weird space. It's that lingering anticipation and tension that builds as you wander though a strange place that you don't understand, waiting for some thing to present itself as a threat...but that tension never gets broken.

It's not in "OOOOH, SP00PY MUNSTER!!!!" with a jumpscare and some really bad design that's not scary but actually goofy when you get a good look at it.
May I interest you two to Prairie Madness?
 
I've done a little thinking recently and I've come to realize that the backrooms was at its scariest and most interesting when you just found out about it and it was the most alien and unique thing you've ever heard of. It has a certain charm to its that's slowly lost the more you see it and think about and notice just how lacking the whole concept really is, beyond the barebones information given by whoever wrote it. Until ultimately the whole concept loses that emotional appeal that hooked you in so hard the first time.

The Kane Pixels series was a huge breath of fresh air to the concept. The backrooms as a concept wasn't just the single image and two sentences anymore (ignoring that stupid lore that nobody over 25 ever took seriously) now it was attached to a larger and more intricate narrative with actual proper storytelling, developing and revealing many mysteries. And that was all well and all at the start but now you search "backrooms found footage" on youtube and you'll find literal thousands of people making their own animations that are literally complete ripoffs of Kane's videos with barely anything unique about them, apart from many of them being really poorly made.

Point is, the Backrooms pushes boundaries and did things no one else ever thought to do. That's what made it so popular in the first place. But when all people do with it is just copy whatever the last guy did that made him so popular, it's gonna become stale and derivative really fucking fast, and bring down the entire thing as a result. It needs innovation, or it'll just die out.
 
All of Wisconsin is cryptid central. Backrooms, serial killers, the Hodag, slenderman killers, etc.
 
The backrooms was a sort of ok idea but it got blown way out of proportion by retards.
Whichever SCP had the near-infinite Ikea was better, partly because it wasn't masturbated over for fucking years.
 
The weird texmex looking dividing wall you'd see at at a food court is ironically more horrifying than an endless office space.
 
The scariest thing about the original image is the color of the lighting. It's nauseating. Imagine working under lighting that color. Is it any wonder people used to bitch non-stop about those old florescent lights from the 70's-90's that were that color and hummed all the time? I can easily see why it drove people nuts. Everything in that color of lighting would do that to anyone.
Actually that's one thing that did come up in the "hunt", the early 00s digital camera it was taken on had the wrong white balance, so the backrooms probably looked more like this -
backrooms.jpg
Doesn't quite hit the same.
 
I never got this backrooms shit, but then I worked graveyard shift security at a variety of less-than-thriving office parks, medical buildings and malls. I think I'm immune to it. I see that backrooms picture and think:

"Whoa, this unused space still has electric and AC, scrounge a table and chair and you got yourself a place to read books, play games or nap during your 12 hour shift."

Real creepy shit is an abandoned warehouse with fucktons of blind corners and massive rusting printing equipment, Satanic graffiti, used needles and condoms and other nasty shit where you find new shit during random walkthroughs that lets you know that someone is still actively hiding there.
 
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