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What is the plot?
Shayne and Amanda open the episode by introducing the topic as a reading of scary internet stories, framing it as an episode built around creepypasta and online horror tales rather than a scripted narrative with a traditional plot. They begin in a conversational studio setup, with both hosts reacting to the premise before they start the reading itself.
They first spend time defining what creepypasta is and establishing the kind of material they are about to cover. The discussion sets up the idea that these are stories circulated online to frighten readers, and they talk through the general appeal and structure of that genre before moving into examples.
From there, the episode shifts into a sequence of story readings and reactions. Shayne and Amanda read and comment on the "internet's scariest stories," stopping repeatedly to respond to creepy details, evaluate the writing, and trade reactions as the tales escalate in unsettling content.
As the reading continues, they move through multiple horror examples in order, maintaining a back-and-forth commentary style rather than acting out a single continuous fictional plot. Their decisions in the episode are simple but driving ones: they choose which stories to read, pause when a passage is especially disturbing, and keep going through the material as a shared exploration of internet horror.
The episode ends after they finish the selected scary stories and wrap up the discussion, closing out the reading segment without a dramatic narrative resolution, since the content is an anthology-style podcast episode rather than a conventional plotted episode.
What is the ending?
Smosh Mouth is a podcast episode, not a scripted TV story with a plot, so there is no ending in the usual narrative sense and no character fate to describe from a fictional storyline. In episode 19, the hosts are discussing and reacting to internet horror stories, so the "ending" is simply the close of their conversation rather than events happening to story characters.
In short, the episode ends with Shayne Topp, Amanda Lehan-Canto, and the guest wrapping up their discussion after reading and reacting to scary internet stories. There is no climax, no resolved conflict, and no main-character fate in the way a movie or scripted drama would have one.
Expanded chronologically: the episode is structured as a podcast conversation, not a scene-based narrative. It opens with the hosts introducing the topic and moving into the internet stories they want to read aloud and react to. From there, the discussion is driven by the stories themselves and by the hosts' reactions as they comment on what they are hearing. The episode does not follow fictional characters through events; instead, the "action" is the back-and-forth among the hosts as they respond to the material.
By the end, the episode closes out after the final story or discussion segment is finished, with the hosts remaining present and active as themselves rather than as characters facing a final outcome. There is no one in the episode whose fate changes in a plot sense, because the participants are real people hosting and talking rather than figures in a scripted ending.
Is there a post-credit scene?
There is no evidence in the available episode listings or descriptions that Smosh Mouth #19, "Reading The Internet's Scariest Stories," includes a post-credit scene.
The episode is described only as Shayne and Amanda reading "the creepiest creepypastas the internet has to offer," with no mention of any extra scene after the main content. The available sources do not provide a transcript or full visual breakdown of the episode's ending, so I can't verify a post-credit scene beyond that.
Which creepypasta or scary story does Shayne and Amanda discuss first in episode 19, and what details make it stand out?
Shayne and Amanda open the episode by reading and discussing internet horror stories, with the episode description highlighting that they cover some of the internet's most chilling creepypastas, including stories like "Mr. Wide Mouth" and "Candle Cove." The first specific story is not identified in the provided search results, so the exact opening story cannot be confirmed from these sources.
What happens in the “Mr. Wide Mouth” story that Shayne and Amanda focus on?
The available sources confirm that "Mr. Wide Mouth" is one of the creepypastas discussed in the episode, but they do not provide a plot breakdown of that story's specific events. Because of that, the exact details Shayne and Amanda react to cannot be determined from the search results alone.
How does the “Candle Cove” story unfold during the episode, and what part of it seems to interest the hosts most?
The sources state that "Candle Cove" is among the creepypastas explored in the episode, but they do not give a scene-by-scene description of how the story unfolds or which part the hosts find most compelling. The search results only support that the story is discussed as part of the episode's horror lineup.
What is the Search and Rescue officer story about, and what supernatural details are mentioned?
The episode description says the final story is a chilling account purportedly from a Search and Rescue officer involving unexplained and supernatural occurrences in the wilderness. The provided sources do not include the full narrative or identify the exact incidents, so only that broad premise can be confirmed.
Which specific characters or figures from the scary stories do Shayne and Amanda talk about most, such as the central entity or narrator in each tale?
The search results confirm that the episode includes discussion of multiple creepypastas and paranormal stories, but they do not list the specific characters in detail beyond the named stories themselves. As a result, the exact figures the hosts focus on most cannot be reliably extracted from the available sources.
Is this family friendly?
No -- this episode is not especially family friendly for young children or very sensitive viewers. It is an adult podcast episode where Shayne and Amanda read "the creepiest creepypastas the internet has to offer," so the content is centered on scary horror stories, suspense, and likely disturbing or unsettling imagery/themes rather than kid-oriented material.
Potentially objectionable or upsetting aspects may include:
- Fear-based horror content and creepy storytelling intended to be frightening.
- Mature humor and commentary, since Smosh Mouth is a general-audience podcast with adult hosts discussing internet content rather than a children's show.
- Disturbing themes that can come with creepypastas, such as unsettling scenarios, eerie characters, or psychological horror elements.
- Possible strong language or irreverent jokes, which are common in Smosh podcast episodes and adult internet commentary.
If you want, I can also give you a very brief "kid-suitability rating" like "safe for older teens," "borderline," or "not recommended for children."