**“GLITCH in the MATRIX?” Bizarre Data Glitch in Streaming Metrics Points to a REAL Mr. Meeseeks**
“GLITCH IN THE MATRIX?” Bizarre Data Glitch in Streaming Metrics Points to a REAL Mr. Meeseeks
A Viral News Exclusive
In what analysts are calling a “statistical impossibility,” a quiet data anomaly has emerged from the raw server logs of a major streaming platform—and it has Rick and Morty fans losing their minds.
The glitch: At exactly 3:14 AM on the day of the Season 6 finale, a single user account, labeled “Acc-137,” streamed the episode “Meeseeks and Destroy”—not once, but 4,000 times in a single hour. Standard physics and server throttling suggest this is impossible. Even a perfectly optimized file couldn’t buffer that fast.
But it gets weirder.
When data recovery teams examined the request string, they found a hidden metadata tag attached to the stream: a hexadecimal code that translates to the phrase “Look at your arm.” Several analysts who reported the discovery reported a sudden, inexplicable urge to check their own skin for phantom tattoos.
One junior engineer claims he was “compelled” to draw a small, blue face on his forearm before the system locked him out.
Streaming giant Interdimensional Cable Inc. (as it identifies itself in the server logs) has refused to comment, but internal messages leaked to our team show a single, chilling response from a server admin: “It’s not a glitch. It’s a request. We’re routing it to Rick.”
Is the Meeseeks Box real? Or has the simulation developed a sense of humor? One thing is clear: the data doesn’t lie. And if you hear a knock at your door followed by a high-pitched “I’m Mr. Meeseeks!”, just know—your subscription is about to get very, very complicated.
**#RicksGlitch #InterdimensionalCable #M