Are You Afraid of the Dark? was an early '90s
Nickelodeon show about a group of teens who gathered in the woods to
tell each other scary stories (instead of doing drugs and having sex,
which is what teenagers actually do in the woods). Most of the
stories were hilariously cheesy, but a few episodes had some truly
unsettling subtexts presumably meant to warn kids about the terrible
lives most of them were doomed to lead.
#5. "The Tale of the Dangerous Soup"
A chef locks people in a room with a plastic gargoyle statue that
scares Jolly Green Giant pee from their bodies. He then uses this liquid
fear to make soup. For some reason.

"It tastes way better than Campbell's."
It's Really About:
The rich literally getting fat off of the poor. Zeusbeard
McTerror owns a restaurant that serves fear soup for a hundred bucks a
bowl while employing a revolving door of downtrodden minimum wage
workers who double as livestock providing the secret ingredient for his
bastardly bisque. His underemployed workforce is in the unique position
of being exploited by both sides of the transaction.

"Tastes like a deferred student loan payment. Delicious."
#4. "The Tale of the Super Specs"
A prankster accidentally casts a spell on a pair of X-ray specs,
because as we all know, the popular kids in high school are never far
from their magic and their novelty glasses.

"I keep these in my closet, right next to my chest of condoms and my varsity letter jacket."
Whenever his girlfriend puts them on, she sees a parallel universe
filled with community theater players who are gradually getting closer
and closer to our world.

The only jobs in their world involve robbing liquor stores.
It's Really About:
Drugs, clearly. The prankster is named Weeds (because it was late and
the script was due the next morning), he's really into "magic," and
he's constantly trying to get his girlfriend to try it. When she finally
does, she has a seriously bad
trip. Also, he enchants the X-ray
specs with some white powder, which he later flushes down a toilet like
Debi Mazar in Goodfellas.
#3. "The Tale of the Night Shift"
A genuinely scary-looking vampire eats his way through the night
shift staff of a hospital, instead of pouting out of a window to indie
rock, which is all vampires seem to do nowadays.

He doesn't look like he listens to much Tegan and Sara.
It's Really About:
Workplace exploitation, which is honestly all the show's target
audience had to look forward to. The main character, a teenage
volunteer, hasn't slept in days when the story takes place.

"It's so hard to focus while I'm on all this heroin."
She is ultimately the one who has to defeat the vampire, despite the
fact that she isn't even earning a wage to do so. We hope they at least
gave her college credit.
#2. "The Tale of the Unfinished Painting"
An art gallery owner uses a magic brush blessed by a mummified head
to trap people inside paintings. She then hangs the paintings in her
gallery for all eternity.


Clearly, she has very little else to do with her time.
It's Really About:
Plagiarism. Mrs. Briar, the curator, convinces young artists to sign
their names on other peoples' artwork with her evil paintbrush.

Unfortunately, she was unable to convince Kaylee not to wear an oversized blazer for no apparent reason.
Once they sign, the painters are doomed to be trapped in their stolen work forever. Which is like a metaphor. A spooky metaphor.
#1. "The Tale of the Time Trap"
A shy teen named Jason makes a wish on a Persian Victory Box purchased from an obvious child molester in a magic shop.

No one wearing that shirt should be allowed within 1,000 feet of a school.
The wishes come true, but cruelly ruin his life in the process, because that's how wishes work in these
stories.
It's Really About:
Dangerous prostitutes. Jason lacks confidence with girls, so the box gives him a hooker.

A magic hooker.
The hooker-genie helps Jason crush all of the school bullies in
dodgeball, but indiscriminately breaks the gym teacher's face, too. When
he wishes for a car, she steals him one, and he winds up in jail. It's like Weird Science, if Gary and Wyatt had conjured Lil' Kim.
