Latest Stories
Most recently published stories on Vocal.
SpongeBob Review
The episode “Neptune’s Spatula” bursts onto the screen like a flamboyant fireworks display, dazzling viewers with its vivid sea‑blue palette and an abundance of nautical puns that echo through every kelp‑swaying frame. From the opening shot of King Neptune’s glittering palace, where coral chandeliers cast a regal shimmer over the marble‑like sea‑floor, the production design feels both opulent and whimsically underwater, a perfect backdrop for the high‑stakes culinary showdown that follows. The writers cleverly weave classic SpongeBob slapstick with a surprisingly earnest quest for validation, allowing the audience to feel the palpable tension as SpongeBob, ever the optimistic fry‑cook, is summoned to prove his worthiness before the ocean’s most powerful monarch. The pacing is brisk yet deliberate, each scene transitioning with the smooth fluidity of a well‑timed spatula flip, and the musical score—an orchestral blend of brass and bubble‑pop motifs—underscores the drama without ever drowning out the characters’ exuberant dialogue.
By Forest Green24 days ago in Geeks
SpongeBob Review
In “Fools in April,” the writers of SpongeBob SquarePants turn the often‑cheerful chaos of the holiday into a satirical commentary on the thin line between harmless fun and malicious mischief, and they do it through Squidward’s simmering exasperation with SpongeBob’s relentless enthusiasm for April Fools’ Day. From the opening shot of the Krusty Krab, where a brightly‑colored banner flutters above a crowd of eager sea‑creatures, the episode establishes a festive atmosphere that is deliberately at odds with Squidward’s drab, muted palette—a visual cue that his patience has reached a breaking point. The narration, peppered with a jaunty ukulele riff, underscores how SpongeBob’s giddy anticipation spreads like an infectious tide, while Squidward, perched behind the register with a furrowed brow and a sigh that seems to echo through the ocean floor, begins to plot a prank that feels more vengeful than playful. This juxtaposition sets the tone for a story that explores not only the absurdity of pranks but also the psychological toll they can exact on both the prankster and the target.
By Forest Green24 days ago in Geeks
Unto The Child
I never knew what to say, so eventually I stopped saying anything. People accepted my silence so easily, as if they had forgotten they had ever heard my voice. Since I could reply, there was no need to hear the endless voices around me. I shut them out and met conversation and connection with silence and vacant stares. It didn’t take long for people to accept that, too. I was alone in the world, like a moving art piece. People saw me and moved along, recognizing I was not one of them. Understand without knowing that I couldn’t contribute on any level to the lives they were leading.
By Leah Suzanne Dewey24 days ago in Fiction
The Nana Adventures: A Trip to the Dentist
Nana believed that even the smallest errands could become brave adventures. So when nine-year-old Eli learned he had a dentist appointment on Thursday afternoon, she clapped her hands softly and said, "Well then, Commander Eli, looks like it's time for Operation Sparkle Smile."
By Tabatha Nabors24 days ago in Fiction
The 30 Percent Armor
My bathroom is a minefield I know by heart. Every tile under my bare feet has its own temperature, every bottle on the shelf its own weight and texture. This is my sanctuary, my little staging ground for practicing “normal” before I step out and put on the mask I’ve spent years carving. This morning is particularly rough. The fog in my left eye—the one that checked out years ago, a late-coming bill from a war injury that finally came due—has started bleeding into the right. A recent ablation did its job, but it left the world looking like a water-damaged oil painting. I see about thirty percent of reality. The other seventy? I fill that in with memory, gut instinct, and pure, raw spite.
By Feliks Karić24 days ago in Fiction
"Scream 7" (2026): Running out of Fresh Screams. Top Story - March 2026.
This is the seventh time we’ve had a Ghostface crisis. Scream 7 is the latest edition of the Scream franchise. Sydney Prescott and her family are under attack by another anonymous killer dressed in a Ghostface costume. While having issues with her daughter, Tatum, they run from the bloody murders, trying to determine who is behind it all.
By Marielle Sabbag24 days ago in Horror










