Imagine or not, "Bridalplasty" is a reality show in which brides compete not only for a dream big event, but for the aspiration face or body to look with it - thanks to plastic surgery! Just whenever you think that reality television set can't get any more painful, along comes this shocking program to prove you wrong.
IÂm a sucker for watching shows about marriage ceremonies. "Say Yes to your Dress", "Whose Wedding Do you find it Anyway", "My Fair Wedding" - you name it, I've watched it. I pretty much thought I had seen it all until I stumbled across "Bridalplasty". Could there really be described as a tv show in which often women compete for a medical procedure? Is it remotely moral? Apparently the answers are it depends - we have reached an alternative low in reality television, and ethics do not even enter into the dialogue.
The standard concept behind "Bridalplasty" is that brides enter into challenges to be able to stay in the competition and earn a medical procedure procedures. In each contest, the bottom finishers are in danger of being cut from the competition. In the show that i watched, the brides had to assemble life-sized puzzles of what they will look like post-plastic surgical treatment. As each woman complete, she was instructed to grab a syringe and go start to see the doctor for an injectible on her behalf face. Seriously, you cannot make this stuff up!
Then the other girls have to vote relating to the two lowest finishers - to their faces - and decide which bride will likely be kicked out of their competitors. Of course, look out if you voted against the bride who ended up getting enough votes to stay; can we say vendetta? The challenge winner gets to have among the list of procedures from her laundry listing of desired surgeries. Most of the brides have ten or more procedures that they imagine they must have just to be the "perfect bride" for their wedding day. Common hopes are liposuction, breast enhancement, Botox, and nose jobs.
Serious thought is needed to give a new slant. Mid-section if its the pets that are getting taken over, in support of the kids notice?
That experiment gone wrong
They say things like "Morals are for lesser mortals" and "The stops justify the means" In that case their creation jumps in place and bites them. Think of all the movie versions of Frankenstein or even Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde therefore you can't go far incorrect. A more recent example was Beau Bridges within Sandkings, the pilot for the modern Outer Limits. Anyone intending to using this scenario should certainly meet some scientists. Some of them are weirder than their fictional equivalents, and they feature great material for reports.
Your mob of villagers
Sometimes there's a ringleader, like an old woman whose grandchild has been killed. Other times there's simply an angry mob yelling "Rhubarb" and waving torches. Perhaps the best example is actually within a spoof, Teen Frankenstein. Mid-section trying a calm mafia? I can't think of a new way of doing this that would be scary, but maybe you can do better?
Your priest who's lost his faith
There are two ways this may well go. The creature says "Your feeble god means nothing to me" and kills the priest within particularly gory fashion. Or the creature says "Your feeble god means nothing to me" and also the priest steps up to your base and drives that creature away. There are fine types of the first in Stephen King's Salem's Lot, and John Carpenter's That Fog. The technology is yet imperfect and for that reason there are car crashes, teach accidents, people dying to diseases. Man is actually imperfect too, and so we are afflicted by assaults, murders together with rapes. Most people pass, and your loved ones have no special protection whatsoever from these activities.
The Crow tells a tale about a young person called Eric. He lives through the worst nightmare of most men - he is forced to watch their fiance?? becoming beaten and raped by a gang of worthless punks and nothing at all is he can do about it (for the instant).
Eric drops dead, but is resurrected by a Crow and sets out on a path with only one purpose - to avenge Shelly. Individually, this gangsters die, paying the highest of prices for their vicious crime. The Crow is still around Eric, helping him to spotlight his task and preventing him from inflicting harm on himself or get totally lost within the memories of his really enjoy.
O'Barr in the beginning wrote The Crow as soon as he lost his girlfriend at an accident. You can tell he has a real background, because the Crow is a darkness, yet just story about a man who had his whole life in front of him and could quite possibly afford to smile - but who was reduced to an avenging product.
3. Your Excorcist by W. K. Blatty
Influenced by a real story (nevertheless "real" religion and demons can usually get), The Excorcist is a dark tale about some sort of Jesuit priest Father Lankester Merrin set in the 1950′ ohydrates. He leads a dig in Iraq and finds a disturbing combination of an ancient Assyrian god statue and then a modern St. Joseph medal.
It turns out that an evil Mother already confronted once arose again and it overtook a young person Regan MacNeil in Merrin's hometown (Georgetown). So many people are skeptical about any possession thing in the beginning, but when usual medical and psychological procedures get it wrong, there seems to get no better explanation.
Father Merrin eventually partcipates in battle with the demonic character now inhabiting Regan, with the help of Father Karras, another Jesuit priest going through a faith crisis just lately. horror, scary movie


