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The original Backrooms image posted on 4chan. The Backrooms are a fictional location originating from a 2019 4chan thread. One of the best known examples of the liminal space aesthetic, the Backrooms are usually portrayed as an impossibly large extradimensional expanse of empty rooms, accessed by exiting ("no-clipping out of") reality.
It is loosely based on the Backrooms urban legend. The series debuted in 2022 with the short film "The Backrooms (Found Footage)" which has over 64 million views as of January 2025. Parsons would expand his series to include twenty more short films. The series is slated for a film adaptation with Parsons set to direct, alongside A24 producing ...
The Backrooms have also been portrayed as inhabited by supernatural entities. [ 8 ] Liminal space images soon gained popularity across the Internet, and by November 2022, a subreddit called r/LiminalSpace had over 500,000 members, the liminal space photo-posting @SpaceLiminalBot on Twitter had accrued over 1.2 million followers, and the TikTok ...
Back room (also back rooms or backrooms) may refer to: The Backrooms, a piece of internet fiction Backrooms, a YouTube series based on the fiction; The Backrooms, an upcoming film based on the web series; The Back Room, a 2005 album by the British rock band Editors; Dark room (sexuality), a room at a nightclub or sex club
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Backrooms (web series) was nominated as a good article, but it did not meet the good article criteria at the time (April 1, 2024, ). There are suggestions on the review page for improving the article.
– maybe note that r/backrooms was created in response to and specifically for the Backrooms. The sentence starting "Happy Mag noted in particular two other levels" is cited to two sources. "Wikis hosted on FANDOM" – change to "Wikis hosted on Fandom" as its official name (not stylisation). "dedicated to the Backrooms lore was established."
The word clerk is derived from the Latin clericus meaning "cleric" or "clergyman", which is the latinisation of the Greek κληρικός (klērikos) from a word meaning a "lot" (in the sense of drawing lots) and hence an "apportionment" or "area of land". [2] [3]