7252005 Spongebob Glitch Creepypasta

2020Creepypasta / edited videosemi-active

Also known as: 07/25/2005 · 7/25/2005 SpongeBob Glitch · Nickelodeon's July 25th Hijack

7252005 Spongebob Glitch Creepypasta is a 2020 horror creepypasta by niceANDcool depicting a disturbing glitched SpongeBob episode that supposedly aired on Nickelodeon July 25, 2005.

The 7/25/2005 SpongeBob Glitch creepypasta is a horror story built around a fake broadcast anomaly that supposedly occurred on Nickelodeon on July 25, 2005 during the SpongeBob SquarePants episode "Your Shoe's Untied/Gary Takes a Bath." The meme originated with an edited YouTube video posted in July 2020 by niceANDcool, which inspired a written creepypasta in May 20213. It picked up serious traction on TikTok in 2022 and 2023, where explainer videos pulled millions of views and introduced the story to a new generation of SpongeBob fans3.

TL;DR

The 7/25/2005 SpongeBob Glitch creepypasta is a horror story built around a fake broadcast anomaly that supposedly occurred on Nickelodeon on July 25, 2005 during the SpongeBob SquarePants episode "Your Shoe's Untied/Gary Takes a Bath." The meme originated with an edited YouTube video posted in July 2020 by niceANDcool, which inspired a written creepypasta in May 2021.

Overview

The 7/25/2005 meme centers on a short, unsettling video that edits footage from the SpongeBob SquarePants double episode "Your Shoe's Untied/Gary Takes a Bath" to simulate a broadcast glitch. In the edited footage, SpongeBob walks into the Krusty Krab and falls flat on his face. Patrick greets him, but SpongeBob doesn't respond. He just lies there, motionless, while the camera slowly zooms in on his body3. The footage cuts between increasingly strange images: SpongeBob on the kitchen floor, his body floating upside-down against a black background, and a distorted clip of SpongeBob and Gary sitting in a giant shoe with warped music playing1.

The whole thing is framed as a real incident, a mysterious signal hijacking or technical failure that a handful of viewers supposedly caught on the night of July 25, 2005. The creepypasta adds a first-person narrator who describes watching the glitch unfold in real time and being unable to explain what happened1.

On July 6, 2020, YouTuber niceANDcool uploaded a video simply titled "7/25/2005." The video spliced together edited clips from the SpongeBob episode to create the illusion of a corrupted broadcast. SpongeBob glitches between poses as if gasping for air, footage cuts to static, and the whole sequence feels like something went wrong with the signal3. The video picked up over 228,000 views in its first three years on the platform3.

About ten months later, on May 5, 2021, a Lost Episode Creepypasta Fandom user named SpongebobSummerSplash wrote a full creepypasta based on the video3. Told from the perspective of someone who was channel-surfing on that July night and stumbled onto the corrupted episode, the story added narrative texture to the already creepy footage. The original post was later deleted after plagiarism accusations, though SpongebobSummerSplash reposted it to the Fandom site later that year3.

The Trollpasta Wiki version of the story, posted on July 25, 2022, includes the narrator's full account: watching SpongeBob freeze mid-scene, cutting to static, seeing distorted images in a black room, and eventually giving up and going to bed. "To this day, no one knows how this incident occurred or who or what caused it," the narrator concludes1.

Origin & Background

Platform
YouTube (original video), Lost Episode Creepypasta Fandom (written pasta)
Key People
niceANDcool, SpongebobSummerSplash
Date
2020
Year
2020

On July 6, 2020, YouTuber niceANDcool uploaded a video simply titled "7/25/2005." The video spliced together edited clips from the SpongeBob episode to create the illusion of a corrupted broadcast. SpongeBob glitches between poses as if gasping for air, footage cuts to static, and the whole sequence feels like something went wrong with the signal. The video picked up over 228,000 views in its first three years on the platform.

About ten months later, on May 5, 2021, a Lost Episode Creepypasta Fandom user named SpongebobSummerSplash wrote a full creepypasta based on the video. Told from the perspective of someone who was channel-surfing on that July night and stumbled onto the corrupted episode, the story added narrative texture to the already creepy footage. The original post was later deleted after plagiarism accusations, though SpongebobSummerSplash reposted it to the Fandom site later that year.

The Trollpasta Wiki version of the story, posted on July 25, 2022, includes the narrator's full account: watching SpongeBob freeze mid-scene, cutting to static, seeing distorted images in a black room, and eventually giving up and going to bed. "To this day, no one knows how this incident occurred or who or what caused it," the narrator concludes.

How It Spread

The creepypasta spread slowly at first, mostly through niche SpongeBob and creepypasta communities. On July 24, 2021, YouTuber Pingvini BS posted a video recreating the purported glitch, which pulled over 156,000 views in two years.

The real breakout came on TikTok. On May 15, 2022, TikToker @theharindersingh posted a discussion video about the creepypasta that blew up to over 4.5 million views within a year. The same month, the Trollpasta Wiki published its version of the story on the anniversary date, July 25.

In early 2023, YouTube explainer channels picked up the thread. PigPigGamer posted a lore breakdown on February 16, 2023 that hit 1.4 million views in three months. On March 26, RodrigoJogos uploaded "7/25/2005 but realistic," a recreation that scored over 17,000 views.

May 2023 brought another wave. TikToker @mjthrillme2020 posted about the glitch on May 7, pulling 2.8 million views in just three days. Two days later, @noahglenncarter's explainer video grabbed over 450,000 views in a single day.

The meme also inspired creative expansions. A user called LazzaroDude wrote "Nickelodeon's July 25th Hijack," a retake that expanded the lore to include a second incident on August 6 involving a rerun of "Your Shoe's Untied" and a separate glitch during "The Sponge Who Could Fly". This version reframed the events as a deliberate signal hijacking rather than a random technical failure, and pointed to obscure forum discussions that supposedly documented the incidents.

How to Use This Meme

The 7/25/2005 format typically works in one of two ways:

Video edits: Creators take existing SpongeBob footage (or other cartoon footage) and apply datamoshing, static overlays, and eerie audio distortion to simulate a broadcast glitch. The standard approach involves a character freezing unnaturally, cutting to increasingly unsettling images, and ending with static or a black screen.

Written creepypasta: Authors write first-person accounts of witnessing a mysterious broadcast anomaly on a specific date. The structure usually follows: normal viewing, something goes wrong, failed attempts to fix it, lingering unresolved questions. The original 7/25/2005 pasta is the template here, with its matter-of-fact narration and open-ended mystery.

Both formats lean heavily on the found-footage aesthetic. The less polished the edit looks, the more convincing. Creators often set their stories on real past dates and reference actual episodes to blur the line between fiction and half-remembered childhood TV.

Cultural Impact

The 7/25/2005 creepypasta sits within a larger tradition of SpongeBob-adjacent horror content that includes classics like "Squidward's Suicide" and the broader lost episode creepypasta genre. What made this one catch on was the YouTube video that preceded the written story. Having actual (edited) footage gave the creepypasta a visual anchor that most lost episode stories lack.

The meme also caught a wave of nostalgia-driven creepypasta interest on TikTok in 2022-2023, where short-form explainer videos turned obscure internet lore into mainstream content. Multiple TikTok videos about the glitch crossed the million-view mark within days of posting.

The retake by LazzaroDude on the Lost Episode Creepypasta Wiki shows how the story grew beyond its original scope, with fan authors expanding the lore and adding new incidents to the timeline.

Fun Facts

The original creepypasta was deleted after plagiarism accusations before being reposted to a different Fandom page.

The Trollpasta Wiki version was posted exactly on the anniversary date, July 25, 2022.

LazzaroDude's retake includes a self-referential section where the author responds to reader ratings and comments within the text itself.

The original niceANDcool video contains no narration or explanation. It's just the edited footage with no context, which made it feel more like a genuine artifact than a scripted creepypasta.

Derivatives & Variations

"7/25/2005 but realistic"

by RodrigoJogos (March 2023), a YouTube recreation that attempted a more convincing simulation of the broadcast glitch[3].

Pingvini BS recreation

(July 2021), an early YouTube video recreating the purported glitch that helped keep interest alive between the original video and the TikTok boom[3].

"Nickelodeon's July 25th Hijack (A Retake on 7/25/2005)"

by LazzaroDude, an expanded retelling that added a second glitch incident on August 6 and reframed the events as a deliberate hijacking[2].

Frequently Asked Questions

7252005 Spongebob Glitch Creepypasta

2020Creepypasta / edited videosemi-active

Also known as: 07/25/2005 · 7/25/2005 SpongeBob Glitch · Nickelodeon's July 25th Hijack

7252005 Spongebob Glitch Creepypasta is a 2020 horror creepypasta by niceANDcool depicting a disturbing glitched SpongeBob episode that supposedly aired on Nickelodeon July 25, 2005.

The 7/25/2005 SpongeBob Glitch creepypasta is a horror story built around a fake broadcast anomaly that supposedly occurred on Nickelodeon on July 25, 2005 during the SpongeBob SquarePants episode "Your Shoe's Untied/Gary Takes a Bath." The meme originated with an edited YouTube video posted in July 2020 by niceANDcool, which inspired a written creepypasta in May 2021. It picked up serious traction on TikTok in 2022 and 2023, where explainer videos pulled millions of views and introduced the story to a new generation of SpongeBob fans.

TL;DR

The 7/25/2005 SpongeBob Glitch creepypasta is a horror story built around a fake broadcast anomaly that supposedly occurred on Nickelodeon on July 25, 2005 during the SpongeBob SquarePants episode "Your Shoe's Untied/Gary Takes a Bath." The meme originated with an edited YouTube video posted in July 2020 by niceANDcool, which inspired a written creepypasta in May 2021.

Overview

The 7/25/2005 meme centers on a short, unsettling video that edits footage from the SpongeBob SquarePants double episode "Your Shoe's Untied/Gary Takes a Bath" to simulate a broadcast glitch. In the edited footage, SpongeBob walks into the Krusty Krab and falls flat on his face. Patrick greets him, but SpongeBob doesn't respond. He just lies there, motionless, while the camera slowly zooms in on his body. The footage cuts between increasingly strange images: SpongeBob on the kitchen floor, his body floating upside-down against a black background, and a distorted clip of SpongeBob and Gary sitting in a giant shoe with warped music playing.

The whole thing is framed as a real incident, a mysterious signal hijacking or technical failure that a handful of viewers supposedly caught on the night of July 25, 2005. The creepypasta adds a first-person narrator who describes watching the glitch unfold in real time and being unable to explain what happened.

On July 6, 2020, YouTuber niceANDcool uploaded a video simply titled "7/25/2005." The video spliced together edited clips from the SpongeBob episode to create the illusion of a corrupted broadcast. SpongeBob glitches between poses as if gasping for air, footage cuts to static, and the whole sequence feels like something went wrong with the signal. The video picked up over 228,000 views in its first three years on the platform.

About ten months later, on May 5, 2021, a Lost Episode Creepypasta Fandom user named SpongebobSummerSplash wrote a full creepypasta based on the video. Told from the perspective of someone who was channel-surfing on that July night and stumbled onto the corrupted episode, the story added narrative texture to the already creepy footage. The original post was later deleted after plagiarism accusations, though SpongebobSummerSplash reposted it to the Fandom site later that year.

The Trollpasta Wiki version of the story, posted on July 25, 2022, includes the narrator's full account: watching SpongeBob freeze mid-scene, cutting to static, seeing distorted images in a black room, and eventually giving up and going to bed. "To this day, no one knows how this incident occurred or who or what caused it," the narrator concludes.

Origin & Background

Platform
YouTube (original video), Lost Episode Creepypasta Fandom (written pasta)
Key People
niceANDcool, SpongebobSummerSplash
Date
2020
Year
2020

On July 6, 2020, YouTuber niceANDcool uploaded a video simply titled "7/25/2005." The video spliced together edited clips from the SpongeBob episode to create the illusion of a corrupted broadcast. SpongeBob glitches between poses as if gasping for air, footage cuts to static, and the whole sequence feels like something went wrong with the signal. The video picked up over 228,000 views in its first three years on the platform.

About ten months later, on May 5, 2021, a Lost Episode Creepypasta Fandom user named SpongebobSummerSplash wrote a full creepypasta based on the video. Told from the perspective of someone who was channel-surfing on that July night and stumbled onto the corrupted episode, the story added narrative texture to the already creepy footage. The original post was later deleted after plagiarism accusations, though SpongebobSummerSplash reposted it to the Fandom site later that year.

The Trollpasta Wiki version of the story, posted on July 25, 2022, includes the narrator's full account: watching SpongeBob freeze mid-scene, cutting to static, seeing distorted images in a black room, and eventually giving up and going to bed. "To this day, no one knows how this incident occurred or who or what caused it," the narrator concludes.

How It Spread

The creepypasta spread slowly at first, mostly through niche SpongeBob and creepypasta communities. On July 24, 2021, YouTuber Pingvini BS posted a video recreating the purported glitch, which pulled over 156,000 views in two years.

The real breakout came on TikTok. On May 15, 2022, TikToker @theharindersingh posted a discussion video about the creepypasta that blew up to over 4.5 million views within a year. The same month, the Trollpasta Wiki published its version of the story on the anniversary date, July 25.

In early 2023, YouTube explainer channels picked up the thread. PigPigGamer posted a lore breakdown on February 16, 2023 that hit 1.4 million views in three months. On March 26, RodrigoJogos uploaded "7/25/2005 but realistic," a recreation that scored over 17,000 views.

May 2023 brought another wave. TikToker @mjthrillme2020 posted about the glitch on May 7, pulling 2.8 million views in just three days. Two days later, @noahglenncarter's explainer video grabbed over 450,000 views in a single day.

The meme also inspired creative expansions. A user called LazzaroDude wrote "Nickelodeon's July 25th Hijack," a retake that expanded the lore to include a second incident on August 6 involving a rerun of "Your Shoe's Untied" and a separate glitch during "The Sponge Who Could Fly". This version reframed the events as a deliberate signal hijacking rather than a random technical failure, and pointed to obscure forum discussions that supposedly documented the incidents.

How to Use This Meme

The 7/25/2005 format typically works in one of two ways:

Video edits: Creators take existing SpongeBob footage (or other cartoon footage) and apply datamoshing, static overlays, and eerie audio distortion to simulate a broadcast glitch. The standard approach involves a character freezing unnaturally, cutting to increasingly unsettling images, and ending with static or a black screen.

Written creepypasta: Authors write first-person accounts of witnessing a mysterious broadcast anomaly on a specific date. The structure usually follows: normal viewing, something goes wrong, failed attempts to fix it, lingering unresolved questions. The original 7/25/2005 pasta is the template here, with its matter-of-fact narration and open-ended mystery.

Both formats lean heavily on the found-footage aesthetic. The less polished the edit looks, the more convincing. Creators often set their stories on real past dates and reference actual episodes to blur the line between fiction and half-remembered childhood TV.

Cultural Impact

The 7/25/2005 creepypasta sits within a larger tradition of SpongeBob-adjacent horror content that includes classics like "Squidward's Suicide" and the broader lost episode creepypasta genre. What made this one catch on was the YouTube video that preceded the written story. Having actual (edited) footage gave the creepypasta a visual anchor that most lost episode stories lack.

The meme also caught a wave of nostalgia-driven creepypasta interest on TikTok in 2022-2023, where short-form explainer videos turned obscure internet lore into mainstream content. Multiple TikTok videos about the glitch crossed the million-view mark within days of posting.

The retake by LazzaroDude on the Lost Episode Creepypasta Wiki shows how the story grew beyond its original scope, with fan authors expanding the lore and adding new incidents to the timeline.

Fun Facts

The original creepypasta was deleted after plagiarism accusations before being reposted to a different Fandom page.

The Trollpasta Wiki version was posted exactly on the anniversary date, July 25, 2022.

LazzaroDude's retake includes a self-referential section where the author responds to reader ratings and comments within the text itself.

The original niceANDcool video contains no narration or explanation. It's just the edited footage with no context, which made it feel more like a genuine artifact than a scripted creepypasta.

Derivatives & Variations

"7/25/2005 but realistic"

by RodrigoJogos (March 2023), a YouTube recreation that attempted a more convincing simulation of the broadcast glitch[3].

Pingvini BS recreation

(July 2021), an early YouTube video recreating the purported glitch that helped keep interest alive between the original video and the TikTok boom[3].

"Nickelodeon's July 25th Hijack (A Retake on 7/25/2005)"

by LazzaroDude, an expanded retelling that added a second glitch incident on August 6 and reframed the events as a deliberate hijacking[2].

Frequently Asked Questions