I just love your style of art it’s simple but uniquely different from everyone else, definitely makes me think of nightmare before Christmas everytime I see it haha
I actually knew this fairytale a little different in german. It doesn't contain an ogre or six sisters, but three brothers and a talking goat and the tablecloth is an actual table that gives all the food and drink you want instead of non digesteble gold XD
Yeah, that's the version I'd heard too. The brothers driven away by their father when the goat tricks him into thinking each isn't taking care of her, and each brother gets each magic item after completing their apprenticeship with a master of a trade: the eldest gets the donkey from a miller, the middle gets the table from a carpenter, and the youngest the club from a robber
@@mgthestrange9098 I know a couple, but my spelling's a bit rusty. There's "scheisse" (the double-S sound is replaced with a B in print), which means "$#!t", and "ficken", which means "to f@*k". Does that help any? 😀
Well, I have one story suggestion for you to tell. It's from the Grimm's fairy tale collections and is very short, but ultimately it goes like this: There's this girl who doesn't listen to her parents. They tell her not to go bother the witch. Which she of course does. The witch transforms the girl to a log and burns her in the fire place. The end.
I know a variant of this tale where the three gifts were given to three different people (they're brothers), which would explain why it's the same inn every time.
If you like fairy tales but you are an adult I think you would love the "Elemental Masters" series of books written by Mercedes Lackey. Each book is inspired by a children's fairy tale and is set in a historical era. Example - "Phoenix and Ashes" which is inspired by Cinderella and takes place in England just before and during World War 1. Other books take place in other historical times before that. And they all take place in a world where magic is real but , like Harry Potter's world, it's kept hidden from ordinary people. They are very enjoyable.
In germany and Austria we have a slightly different version of that story, in our story its three brothers, the oldest, the middle and the youngest. They all work at a mill and get when they leave they get those things. The rest of the story is exactly the same, its called „tischlein deck dich“
I remember reading this one as a child and laughing when the innkeeper got beaten by the club until he gave back the donkey and tablecloth. But the version I read had the tablecloth filled with a feast, and the macaroni head unable to remember the “stop club” command.
Oh I grew up with a version of this tale! There it was about a poor man who had a bunch of kids and a wife. And the King of the Winds gave him all these gifts.
Finally! the physically and intellectually disabled kid gets to escape their ableist and abusive family* (I think maybe the ogre recognized what it's like to be catergorized as a monster). *though if I were to write a fix-it fit, the sisters might get a happy ending that the mother is left out of. (signed a physically disabled woman who's had to witness too many of my cohort being abused, and able to do nothing to help them). See also: Hans my Hedgehog, from the Grimm Bros.
Same, I wish the sisters *and* boy get a happy ending! Like the sisters don't get married off, and are all happy as a little family without their mother.
What a miracle that the ogre did not eat Antuono and they became friends and the ogre became the lad's mentor!! Also good karma that the landlord and landlady at the inn got what they deserved with that cudgel!!
I remember reading a similar story in Italy as a child, but it was first a carpet that is switched, then a donkey, then the third time the main character is given a magic item, it was to punish whomever was fooling the main character. Edit: ok, it’s very similar, but I remember instead of being the son it was the father of the family that brought the gifts to the family.
I heard a similar strory, but without ogre and with three brothers getting those treasures from their dead parent (oldest, middle, the fairy tale favorite youngest, you know how it goes).
I always loved stories like this. Even the Golden Goose one, or the one about the gemed eggs from a witch who could remove her head but is friendly to help out a young girl after she does some simple chores for her! ^^
I enjoy watching your videos a lot! I’ve always wanted to know where do you get your research about these fairytales from? Like websites or books? I wanna dig into old fairytales and be able to read the tales myself!
I remember a variation of this one. It was about a boy trying to retrieve his flour from the north wind. That one was much more light hearted and the protagonist was a child so him being so naive could be forgiven.
11:08 I don't know if someone else has said this already but I think it's cause he didn't say it to the club just around it. Real high quality inchantments if you ask me.😂
Is there anywhere online you could direct me to find the more obscure fairytales and folktales already have most of the standard fairytale books I'm just intrigued by the ones you don't hear too much about.
Betting the ogre is his dad, would explain why he went there of all places; why the ogre treated him so well. Plus it sounds like his ogre dad telling him to get a real job at this point.
I have heard another version of this story. Three brothers live with thier mother. The oldest take out to work and get the donkey after a year. He performs it at the inn and it gets stolen from the innkeeper. At home there happens the same as this story. Then the second brother goes out for work and gets the cloth after a year. He performs it at the same inn as his brother and the innkeeper steals it. At home the same thing happens as this story. Then the third brother leaves to work and gets the klup after a year. He stops at the same inn as his brother shows how to awake it. He speep with it under his pillow and the innkeeper says the commando and gets beaten. The brother first stops it after getting the other items and takes them all home. There the story ends the same as the video
Well, if that isn't the Italian Cousin of the German fairytale "Tischlein deck dich, Goldesel und Knüppel aus dem Sack" by the Gebrüder Grimm. Yes that's really it's Name... ^^;
I think the other version of this story is more common. In that story, there are no sisters, there's three brothers who live with their father. The father tells the oldest to take their goat to graze, which he does. At the end of the day, the oldest asks the goat: "Are you full?", the goat says "I'm so full, I don't want a single leaf". So the brother returns home, the father asks the goat if it's eaten well, and the lying goat tells him that it didn't get to eat anything and that it's very hungry. So the father becomes very upset and tells his son to leave. The son leaves and starts working as a carpenter's apprentice. The carpenter gives him the donkey and tells him about its deal: you need to say "Bricklebrit" and it...well, craps gold. The donkey got stolen by a greedy innkeeper as well. The other two brothers were chased away by their father too because the thing with the goat happened again, and the middle brother started working as an apprentice as a miller, the youngest worked as an apprentice as a lathe worker. One got the table and one got the bat. The table gets stolen by the innkeeper, but when he tries to steal the bat from the youngest brother later, he says "Knüppel aus dem Sack" and the innkeeper gets beaten up by it. The younger brother reclaims the table and the donkey and goes home. Meanwhile the goat has lied to the father about being hungry too and he chased it away and felt sorry about kicking out his sons, so they're welcome to come back home. They all live happily ever after
Do you remember Disney's version of The Hunchback of Notre Dame? I remembered reading that, unlike the happy ending in the Disney version, the book version was completely different in the end. Esmeralda dies and Quasimodo stays in the cathedral and continues to ring the bells until he dies, or passes away himself. I'm not sure if this counts as a dark version, but thought I'd bring it up. Also, I heard from my friend that the original Peter Pan story was a WHOLE LOT darker than the Disney version: Peter lures the boys to NeverLands, but kills them if they start to grow old. Which doesn't make sense to me because I always thought NeverLand had the magic to keep you forever young no matter how long you stayed there. ^^;
"...Big Anthony (Antuono) sang, Bubble, Bubble, Pasta Pot,/Boil me some pasta, nice and hot,/I'm hungry and it's time to sup,/Boil enough to fill me up."
Love your videos!! Im a minor but they are really fun to just Watch and listen, because they Are just very different there Are no words! LOL (Lots Of Love), a random minor on the internet! Ps: Ik What LOL means
Download Love & Pies here: pixly.go2cloud.org/SH3iW Thanks to Love & Pies for sponsoring!
Pies remind me of autumn/fall for some reason. Love reminds me of October. Odd.
"couldn't even throw a snowball" is a perfect way to describe someone.
I just love your style of art it’s simple but uniquely different from everyone else, definitely makes me think of nightmare before Christmas everytime I see it haha
Very child like and whimsical yet somewhat uncanny and crude illustrative art
It makes me think of the Coraline movie
She's definitely very talented! Also hello there logo long time no see!
@@brennadelowery3 hello I guess? Do I know you?
I actually knew this fairytale a little different in german. It doesn't contain an ogre or six sisters, but three brothers and a talking goat and the tablecloth is an actual table that gives all the food and drink you want instead of non digesteble gold XD
I think I've heard that one
Yeah, that's the version I'd heard too. The brothers driven away by their father when the goat tricks him into thinking each isn't taking care of her, and each brother gets each magic item after completing their apprenticeship with a master of a trade: the eldest gets the donkey from a miller, the middle gets the table from a carpenter, and the youngest the club from a robber
My grandma read this fairytale to me when I was little. I gotta say in german the phrases needed to activate the magical gifts seem a bit more fun.
I can imagine. Just about every word is more fun in German lol
What are they? I don’t speak German.
@@mgthestrange9098 I know a couple, but my spelling's a bit rusty. There's "scheisse" (the double-S sound is replaced with a B in print), which means "$#!t", and "ficken", which means "to f@*k". Does that help any? 😀
@MG The Strange
Not German but in Dutch it is "Ezeltje strek je, tafeltje dek je, knuppel uit de zak!"
@@MissMoontree zooooo nu pas valt het kwartje waarom het me zo bekend voor kwam… moest eerst aan de Efteling denken 😂
I like the way the ogre was drawn. He actually looked really cute in this art style.
He was quite a decent guy tbf. I think ogres get a bad rap
Well, I have one story suggestion for you to tell. It's from the Grimm's fairy tale collections and is very short, but ultimately it goes like this:
There's this girl who doesn't listen to her parents. They tell her not to go bother the witch. Which she of course does. The witch transforms the girl to a log and burns her in the fire place. The end.
love the ending ahhaha
Well, they *did* warn her.
Omg, love that one. It is a bit short though
Yikes
Literally knocked some sense into him😂😂 such a cute story!
I like it here. It feels like every upload is Halloween.
I feel like "Down, club" wouldn't have been that hard to guess after "Up, club." I guess it's hard to think while a magic stick is beating you bloody
I know a variant of this tale where the three gifts were given to three different people (they're brothers), which would explain why it's the same inn every time.
If you like fairy tales but you are an adult I think you would love the "Elemental Masters" series of books written by Mercedes Lackey. Each book is inspired by a children's fairy tale and is set in a historical era. Example - "Phoenix and Ashes" which is inspired by Cinderella and takes place in England just before and during World War 1. Other books take place in other historical times before that. And they all take place in a world where magic is real but , like Harry Potter's world, it's kept hidden from ordinary people. They are very enjoyable.
I LOVE that series. My favorite is her take on Puss in boots.
@@sarahsnyder2684 yes! I just re-read that last night. "Reserved For The Cat"
I read a story similar to this, called "the north wind." The kid kept getting gifts from the north wind and getting scammed by the innkeeper
In germany and Austria we have a slightly different version of that story, in our story its three brothers, the oldest, the middle and the youngest. They all work at a mill and get when they leave they get those things. The rest of the story is exactly the same, its called „tischlein deck dich“
I remember reading this one as a child and laughing when the innkeeper got beaten by the club until he gave back the donkey and tablecloth. But the version I read had the tablecloth filled with a feast, and the macaroni head unable to remember the “stop club” command.
I love this story!! It reminds me of a book of stories I read when I was a kid❤️
I adore these lesser known stories! You're a great story teller.
Oh I grew up with a version of this tale! There it was about a poor man who had a bunch of kids and a wife. And the King of the Winds gave him all these gifts.
It's almost like a german tale "The Wishing-Table, the Gold-Ass, and the Cudgel in the Sack" They got similar gifts but not from ogres.
Finally! the physically and intellectually disabled kid gets to escape their ableist and abusive family* (I think maybe the ogre recognized what it's like to be catergorized as a monster).
*though if I were to write a fix-it fit, the sisters might get a happy ending that the mother is left out of. (signed a physically disabled woman who's had to witness too many of my cohort being abused, and able to do nothing to help them). See also: Hans my Hedgehog, from the Grimm Bros.
Same, I wish the sisters *and* boy get a happy ending! Like the sisters don't get married off, and are all happy as a little family without their mother.
Your voice is so soothing. Even with your disturbing content, which I love btw, it could put me to sleep. Thanks for the great stories!
I love the old unfamiliar dark folk tales! Thank you for them!
What a miracle that the ogre did not eat Antuono and they became friends and the ogre became the lad's mentor!! Also good karma that the landlord and landlady at the inn got what they deserved with that cudgel!!
I love this wholesome oger. I've always loved stories where the monster is the good guy.
in the netherlands we have a theme park called the efteling which is fairytale themed, they have a square themed after this fairytale its very fun!
I remember reading a similar story in Italy as a child, but it was first a carpet that is switched, then a donkey, then the third time the main character is given a magic item, it was to punish whomever was fooling the main character.
Edit: ok, it’s very similar, but I remember instead of being the son it was the father of the family that brought the gifts to the family.
swear whenever i come here there's a strange familiarity with some stories. i might've heard a version of this one but idk where i would have.
Sounds like Tischlein deck dich, Esel reck dich, Esel streck dich and Knüppel aus dem Sack, Knüppel in den Sack. In that Story his Name is Hans.
Your videos have helped me a lot to handle my fears of things creepy and crawly and spooky. Thank you so much! ❤️
your voice is so soothing, i love when you read stories you always have an amazing vibe, but i can't really describe it lol
I heard a similar strory, but without ogre and with three brothers getting those treasures from their dead parent (oldest, middle, the fairy tale favorite youngest, you know how it goes).
I always loved stories like this. Even the Golden Goose one, or the one about the gemed eggs from a witch who could remove her head but is friendly to help out a young girl after she does some simple chores for her! ^^
I enjoy watching your videos a lot! I’ve always wanted to know where do you get your research about these fairytales from? Like websites or books? I wanna dig into old fairytales and be able to read the tales myself!
Unless it was pointed out in the video Idk I haven’t actually watched the complete video just yet
I love this UA-camr so much!:)
Have you heard about Creepy Tale 3 release? I think you will like ☺☺☺
I remember a variation of this one. It was about a boy trying to retrieve his flour from the north wind. That one was much more light hearted and the protagonist was a child so him being so naive could be forgiven.
11:08 I don't know if someone else has said this already but I think it's cause he didn't say it to the club just around it. Real high quality inchantments if you ask me.😂
Yay! A fairy tale where the ogre isn't a man eating monster.
Have you H. P Lovecraft books yet? The "Cats of Ulthair" is on of my favs.
This was a great story! I just love your voice!
You’re right that ogre does sound adorable.
Is there anywhere online you could direct me to find the more obscure fairytales and folktales already have most of the standard fairytale books I'm just intrigued by the ones you don't hear too much about.
Betting the ogre is his dad, would explain why he went there of all places; why the ogre treated him so well.
Plus it sounds like his ogre dad telling him to get a real job at this point.
I have heard another version of this story.
Three brothers live with thier mother. The oldest take out to work and get the donkey after a year. He performs it at the inn and it gets stolen from the innkeeper. At home there happens the same as this story.
Then the second brother goes out for work and gets the cloth after a year. He performs it at the same inn as his brother and the innkeeper steals it. At home the same thing happens as this story.
Then the third brother leaves to work and gets the klup after a year. He stops at the same inn as his brother shows how to awake it. He speep with it under his pillow and the innkeeper says the commando and gets beaten. The brother first stops it after getting the other items and takes them all home. There the story ends the same as the video
This is now my favourite channel
I want to be as understanding as that ogre.
Hehe I heard the Disney version of this story using Donald and the three nephews instead.
I've never heard this one before. Pretty damn cool
Oh I actually heard of this one story, it's funny but also kinda painful (physically and mentally)
Love it. And subbed again.
I loved this & m always looking 4ward 2 ur next video!❤
Huh, im sure i have heard this exact fairy-tale before haha!
My mother used to tell me a story about a girl who used to stamp her feet so much she was cursed to become a donkey
Yay! A new video on my birthday!
Why is that ogers eye so relalalistic
I know I'm late to the party but you're still making videos right? I'd love to see more of your videos about the creepy origins of Disney movies.
Abitfrank has a channel that tells stories asmr style (A bit late). Really nice to listen at night while being cozy in your bed😊
I had a lot of fun with this.
I've never been this early I'm impressed with myself
Any more Pentamerone stories by Basile you will cover soon by any chance, abitfrank?
Well, if that isn't the Italian Cousin of the German fairytale "Tischlein deck dich, Goldesel und Knüppel aus dem Sack" by the Gebrüder Grimm. Yes that's really it's Name... ^^;
I think the other version of this story is more common.
In that story, there are no sisters, there's three brothers who live with their father. The father tells the oldest to take their goat to graze, which he does. At the end of the day, the oldest asks the goat: "Are you full?", the goat says "I'm so full, I don't want a single leaf". So the brother returns home, the father asks the goat if it's eaten well, and the lying goat tells him that it didn't get to eat anything and that it's very hungry. So the father becomes very upset and tells his son to leave.
The son leaves and starts working as a carpenter's apprentice. The carpenter gives him the donkey and tells him about its deal: you need to say "Bricklebrit" and it...well, craps gold. The donkey got stolen by a greedy innkeeper as well.
The other two brothers were chased away by their father too because the thing with the goat happened again, and the middle brother started working as an apprentice as a miller, the youngest worked as an apprentice as a lathe worker. One got the table and one got the bat. The table gets stolen by the innkeeper, but when he tries to steal the bat from the youngest brother later, he says "Knüppel aus dem Sack" and the innkeeper gets beaten up by it. The younger brother reclaims the table and the donkey and goes home. Meanwhile the goat has lied to the father about being hungry too and he chased it away and felt sorry about kicking out his sons, so they're welcome to come back home. They all live happily ever after
I feel so bad for the poor donkey! Oww.
Underrated you need more subscribers!Who else feels very comfortable with her 🖤
👇
Bro really went up to the Ogre and said: Nice fit, bro.
I heard of a similar story except it was with driedels(Jewish spinning tops used for gambling)
Im czech And I know this Story As "obušku z pytle ven"🤭🇨🇿✨
Great tale 😀
How the crap was this not in Shrek? It would have been hilarious!
Apparently himbos have been a thing in Italy for a very long time
Sometimes all it takes is to literally beat the living daylights out of you to actually think properly.
Do you remember Disney's version of The Hunchback of Notre Dame?
I remembered reading that, unlike the happy ending in the Disney version, the book version was completely different in the end.
Esmeralda dies and Quasimodo stays in the cathedral and continues to ring the bells until he dies, or passes away himself.
I'm not sure if this counts as a dark version, but thought I'd bring it up.
Also, I heard from my friend that the original Peter Pan story was a WHOLE LOT darker than the Disney version: Peter lures the boys to NeverLands, but kills them if they start to grow old. Which doesn't make sense to me because I always thought NeverLand had the magic to keep you forever young no matter how long you stayed there. ^^;
Sadly the book has alot of racist tropes in it against rroma so its def darker in that aspect
I kept laughing each time I saw the donkey from Shrek 🤣🤣
This is suspiciously similair to another fairytale i know... But that one was probably based on this one
OMG I LOVE "LOVE & PIES"!!! 🥰🥧
I've heard a different version of that story that's more suitable for children. And yes, it was written by Disney.
Please- why is the ogre so sweet-
That advertised section smacks hard of Merge Mansion.
Yay I’m first also great video keep up the good work
I love this site
"...Big Anthony (Antuono) sang, Bubble, Bubble, Pasta Pot,/Boil me some pasta, nice and hot,/I'm hungry and it's time to sup,/Boil enough to fill me up."
This story was interesting
While very stupid, Antuono seems sweet.
In Ukraine, we have Devil's own mother, who gave a very poor family all these gifts
Love your videos!! Im a minor but they are really fun to just Watch and listen, because they Are just very different there Are no words! LOL (Lots Of Love), a random minor on the internet!
Ps: Ik What LOL means
Makeshift mozzarellas😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Fairytale's first Kevin~
what is the name of this story
this is so interesting
This seems interesting.
Put her there Mr Ogre🤝
Yay cozy spooki tiemmm
Interesting!
Well, that ogre sure does have some, ah, patience with Antuono
A donkey that shits gems? I could use one of those. 😀
Tischlein deck' dich, Goldesel reck' dich, Knüppel aus dem Sack!
The ogre slayed throughout the story
Thoese mobile games are not pay to win, I really love the Stories you read they are really exciting, it's a shame you cannot be dirty.
🔥🔥🔥
You sound like @iilluminaughtii but with a higher pitch and tone. 😄