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About
@yellowcrocs421 is a psychological revenge thriller about what happens when public shaming stops being virtual.
Steve Richardson is not a celebrity, a politician, or a man looking for trouble. He is a husband, a father, and a middle-aged IT worker trying to hold together an ordinary life. Then a single moment is ripped from context, pushed online, and turned into a spectacle. In days, Steve loses his job, his reputation, and the fragile stability of the life he built. Strangers decide who he is. Former coworkers add fuel. The internet does what it does best: it erases the person and preserves the accusation.
Then the mob finds his daughter.
When his little girl is identified, harassed, and chased in the real world for the crime of being related to him, something in Steve breaks for good. What begins as rage hardens into purpose. Behind an anonymous account, he starts tracking the people who helped destroy his family, beginning with the loudest voice in the swarm. He tells himself he is not losing control. He is taking it back.
As Steve moves from humiliation to obsession, @yellowcrocs421 follows the terrifying logic of a man who no longer believes in restraint, mercy, or the idea that the system will ever correct itself. Fueled by alcohol, drugs, and revenge, he does not see himself as a monster. He sees himself as the consequence.
Dark, violent, and uncomfortably plausible, @yellowcrocs421 is a thriller about cancel culture, digital mobs, and the thin line between justice and vengeance. It asks a blunt question: when a man is publicly erased and his family is put in the crosshairs, what, exactly, is he capable of doing to fight back.
Steve Richardson is not a celebrity, a politician, or a man looking for trouble. He is a husband, a father, and a middle-aged IT worker trying to hold together an ordinary life. Then a single moment is ripped from context, pushed online, and turned into a spectacle. In days, Steve loses his job, his reputation, and the fragile stability of the life he built. Strangers decide who he is. Former coworkers add fuel. The internet does what it does best: it erases the person and preserves the accusation.
Then the mob finds his daughter.
When his little girl is identified, harassed, and chased in the real world for the crime of being related to him, something in Steve breaks for good. What begins as rage hardens into purpose. Behind an anonymous account, he starts tracking the people who helped destroy his family, beginning with the loudest voice in the swarm. He tells himself he is not losing control. He is taking it back.
As Steve moves from humiliation to obsession, @yellowcrocs421 follows the terrifying logic of a man who no longer believes in restraint, mercy, or the idea that the system will ever correct itself. Fueled by alcohol, drugs, and revenge, he does not see himself as a monster. He sees himself as the consequence.
Dark, violent, and uncomfortably plausible, @yellowcrocs421 is a thriller about cancel culture, digital mobs, and the thin line between justice and vengeance. It asks a blunt question: when a man is publicly erased and his family is put in the crosshairs, what, exactly, is he capable of doing to fight back.