Bananananana.mp4 «Fresh ✭»
It was tiny—only 400KB—and had no thumbnail. Curious, Elias double-clicked. The Footage
Elias leaned closer to the screen. On the monitor inside the video, he saw a pixelated version of his own bedroom. He saw the back of his own head, sitting at his desk, watching the video. The End of the File Bananananana.mp4
It began on a Tuesday at 2:14 AM. Elias, a freelance video editor, was cleaning out an old external drive he’d bought at a thrift store. Amidst folders of corrupted family photos and forgotten college essays sat a single file: Bananananana.mp4 . It was tiny—only 400KB—and had no thumbnail
When Elias opened it now, the white table was gone. The camera was inside a dark room. The only light came from a pile of bananas—hundreds of them—filling the space from floor to ceiling. In the center of the pile sat a computer monitor. On the monitor inside the video, he saw
Ten minutes later, while browsing the web, a window popped up. Bananananana.mp4 was back on his desktop.
