The rag is eventually discarded, where a fly finds it in a trash truck and eats the contaminated product, causing him to mutate. Another person wipes his face with it, and tentacles grow from his cheeks. He uses a rag to clean it up but sees green glowing material on it. Meanwhile, the story cuts to a large industrial facility, where someone accidentally kicks down a vial containing a mutagenic toxic sample and it smashes to the floor. As Elmer later joins the rest of the group for recess, he sits alone voicing his ill feelings towards Buttercup for the incident as he eats through a jar of paste. Keane later helps Elmer clean himself up after the incident, explaining that despite Buttercup's actions (and those of almost all of the other children) being condemnable, his paste-eating is an imitable act that she herself does not recommend. Keane demands Buttercup to apologize to Elmer for her actions, but stalls long enough for the class to run out the room for recess, when she refuses to do so and says Elmer "should have ducked" the paste. Though Blossom and Bubbles observe this harassment with disapproval, Buttercup disappointedly finds pleasure in contributing and goes as far as to yelling "eat this, paste-eater" and pelting him with a glob of paste in slow motion to bring him to tears. Not one to take to the odd behavior, fellow student Mitch Mitchelson disgustedly calls him a "paste eater", and a round of bullying and name-calling (mostly relating to him eating paste) for his habit erupts within the classroom. As she takes roll call, she notices Elmer is not responding like he normally would, and instead putting the paste in his mouth. Keane and the kindergarteners are making crafts with paste and popsicle sticks. Right after being bullied at school for eating paste, Elmer Skloo becomes a paste monster, It's up to Buttercup to admit her actions to Elmer in her least favorite way: apologizing.Īt Pokey Oaks Kindergarten, Ms.
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