>>24456622 lb
isn't Neti dead?
>>24458985 pb
Seems like coms.
Crows want something in her hair.
staged?
Story of Rapunzel:
Grok's augury per the Romans
". If it were an ancient Roman haruspice reading the birds, they'd probably call it a sign of clever disruption ahead rather than straight apocalypse."
Otherwise,
pulled from recent chatter around the video):
Crows/ravens as messengers and omens of change or endings: In many traditions (European augury, Celtic/Norse lore, etc.), corvids are clever intermediaries between worlds—Odin's ravens
Thought and Memory,
trickster creators in Native American stories, or wise but disruptive figures. Some users are reading this as a "bad omen" or signal of transformation for Disney itself: "something is going on" after the recent Olaf animatronic glitch at Disneyland Paris.
Comments like "evil witch has cursed Disney parks" or "death comes in threes" are floating around, playing up the back-to-back "character malfunctions" as a sign of bigger trouble (lost magic, corporate "tangled" fate, etc.). One person straight-up called it a "bad omen for @Disney
."
boredpanda.com +1
The hair + nest superstition: A recurring childhood folklore warning pops up a lot here—"never let birds use your hair for a nest, or it'll bring bad luck/ headaches/ entanglement in life." Since Rapunzel's magic hair is the whole point of her story (power, freedom, healing), crows stealing it gets spun as symbolic theft of vitality, creativity, or "fairy-tale innocence."
One commenter tied the crows' intelligence and Rapunzel's enchanted locks together: "this feels like a bad omen lol."
In some South Asian/Indian traditions mentioned, crows link to Shani (Saturn—delays, lessons) or pitru devtas (ancestors),
so bird activity like this can feel like a heads-up about upcoming shifts or ancestral messages.
@tea_with_hunny
More positive or neutral oracle takes
: Not everyone's doom-and-gloom. Crows are also seen as ancestors signaling "I'm here with wisdom" or "end of confusion" in some modern pagan/animist views.
Japanese context (karasu in Shinto/folklore) sometimes casts them as divine messengers rather than pure harbingers of doom.
A few posts frame it as nature's comedy or clever opportunism, not prophecy—crows just being smart urban survivors.
>>24459007 pb
The Brothers Grimm Version (the original “Rapunzel”)A man and his wife live happily but long for a child. Behind their house is a high-walled garden belonging to a powerful sorceress (later editions call her Mother Gothel or Frau Gothel).
One day, the pregnant wife spots a bed of fresh rampion—a leafy green salad herb also known in German as Rapunzel—and develops an overwhelming craving for it. She tells her husband she’ll die without it.That night, the husband sneaks over the wall and steals some rampion.
He brings it home, and his wife devours it happily… but her craving only grows stronger. He returns for more the next night—and this time the sorceress catches him.
Furious, she demands a terrible bargain: he can take all the rampion he wants, but when the baby is born, it must be given to her.
A girl is born. The sorceress takes the child, names her Rapunzel after the plant, and raises her as her own.
When Rapunzel turns twelve, the sorceress locks her away in a tall tower deep in the forest.
The tower has no door and no stairs—only a single small window at the very top. Every day the sorceress visits by calling up:
“Rapunzel, Rapunzel, let down your hair!”
Rapunzel’s hair has grown magically long and golden; she lowers it like a rope, and the sorceress climbs up.