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1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/columbine.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:300:Harris (left) and Klebold (right) caught on the school's security cameras in the cafeteria, 11 minutes before their suicides.]]
3->'''Creator/MichaelMoore''': If those kids were here right now, what would you say to them?\
4'''Music/MarilynManson''': I wouldn't say a single word to them. I would listen to what they have to say. And that's what no one did.
5-->-- ''Film/BowlingForColumbine''
6
7On Tuesday, April 20, 1999, Eric David Harris (age 18) and Dylan Bennet Klebold (age 17) entered Columbine High School in Littleton, Colorado and opened fire on their fellow students. By the end of their violent rampage, fifteen people were dead--twelve students, one teacher, and the killers themselves--and another 24 were injured. Following the shooting, everybody in America, from politicians to reporters, ran around like headless chickens in attempts to recount what had happened. This page is [[Website/TVTropes our]] attempt.
8----
9[[foldercontrol]]
10[[folder:Background]]
11With so many claims about them coming from every direction, what we do know about the killers, and their motivations, deserves to be discussed. This is easier for Harris and Klebold than with most {{Spree Killer}}s, as the two left behind a treasure trove of home videos, diaries, and other records that detailed their thought processes, attitudes, and plans for the massacre. This mountain of information is also largely responsible for the mystique that built up around the two and their crimes, especially in comparison to massacres with higher body counts. Psychologists, cultural critics, and the killers' fandom have spent years examining and picking apart Harris and Klebold's personal artifacts.\
12\
13The two boys were juvenile {{delinquents}} who had a history of trouble with the law. The year before the shooting, they had both been arrested for breaking into and stealing tools from a locked van. They made such a good impression on the police that, in exchange for having their criminal records made-clean, they would go through a program that included community service, psychiatric treatment, and, for {{Ha|irTriggerTemper}}rris, anger management classes. For showing good behavior and proving to their handlers that they were reformed and rehabilitated, they were discharged from the program a few months early. In the memoirs they recorded before the shooting, they bragged about how well they had [[ISurrenderSuckers fooled the police into thinking they had changed their ways]]. Following this program, the two would later made a video for a school project called ''Film/HitmenForHire'' in which they played two {{Bully Hunter}}s, and Harris wrote a violent ''VideoGame/{{Doom}}'' FanFic for a creative writing project. Harris was also caught the year before making threats on his website to various students and teachers, and Klebold had a long history of both cursing at teachers and getting into frequent arguments with his manager at the pizza place he worked at.\
14\
15Harris and Klebold were victims of bullying, including homophobic remarks, but they gave as good as they got. They often wrote in their notebooks about how they themselves had bullied underclassmen and "fags". (Ironically, Klebold identified as bisexual online, although he [[ButNotTooBi remained closeted]] in real life until he died.) In early reports, the two were said to be members of the "Trenchcoat Mafia", a clique of gamers and self-styled outcasts who all wore black trenchcoats. In reality, they were only friends with one member of the group, and most of the group's members had graduated before the massacre. The killers were also not quite the {{loners|AreFreaks}} that early reports described them as. They had a number of friends (friends who were unpopular, but friends nonetheless), and three days before the massacre, Klebold had taken female friend Robyn Anderson to the prom without incident. The duo were avid gamers, particularly of ''VideoGame/{{Doom}}'' (which Harris had even made [[GameMod mods]] for), and used the names "Reb" and "[=VoDKa=]" (Harris and Klebold, respectively) as both their online handles and their nicknames.\
16\
17In regards to motive, the general consensus amongst investigators says the pair, particularly Harris, were [[StrawNihilist nothing short of nihilists]] who wanted to leave a mark on the world. Posthumously-conducted personality profiles of Harris stated that he was an anti-social, paranoid, [[ItsAllAboutMe narcissistic]] [[TheSociopath sociopath]] with unrestrained aggression. Harris's journal reveals an {{Ubermensch}} mindset, with frequent references to [[TheSocialDarwinist "natural selection"]] (a slogan which happened to adorn the shirt he wore during the massacre). One entry in Harris's journal is a discussion on how he wanted to put everyone into a super-''Doom'' game and see to it that only the strong survive.\
18\
19Klebold's diaries likewise talked about how he and Harris were [[EvolutionaryLevels more highly evolved]] than the rest of humanity, though overall his entries reveal that he, whilst still sociopathic, leaned more towards being self-loathing and suicidal, with a tendency to obsess over female classmates with whom he was barely acquainted. While gifted intellectually, he had a tendency to "snap" when confronted, desperately seeking affirmation from his friend. He was also was equally influenced by Harris's sociopathy and personal vengeance against "the world". With all of this having been stated, it's clear that planning for the shooting was an act of cold and calmly-conducted calculation rather than impotent, near-infernal rage, and attempting to tie the events to a singular incident oversimplifies the killers' psyches.\
20\
21It's also worth mentioning that both diaries made frequent references to the Oklahoma City bombing, the Waco Siege, and other past domestic and international disasters and massacres, noting how they desired to "outdo" these events. Their collective codename for the sequence of events was "NBK", an acronymic reference to one of their favorite films, ''Film/NaturalBornKillers'', in which the main characters go on a killing spree and become celebrities in the process.\
22\
23The location and timing of their massacre was no coincidence either, and it emphasized their lack of specific targets. If jocks, Christians, or the school's social elite were the targets, then the killers would have presumably attacked a school sporting event, a church, or the prom, the latter of which happened to occur three days earlier. Harris' journal specifically mentions wanting a [[IfItBleedsItLeads "media-friendly killing"]] that would shock all of America in their everyday routine, not something [[HorrorDoesntSettleForSimpleTuesday tied to a particular event]]. No experience could be more universal than a normal day at school.
24[[/folder]]
25
26[[folder:The Massacre]]
27Harris and Klebold started planning their attack a year in advance. Their plan was to build a number of large bombs, which they would plant in the cafeteria, then detonate them at lunch time to destroy the cafeteria and the library above it. (Had this come to pass, they would have killed hundreds of students in what would have been the deadliest act of domestic terrorism in American history, which is why they, who expected to kill about 250 people, thought they would "top" Oklahoma City's death count of 168.) After the explosion, they would pick off survivors outside as they fled the burning school. Notes in their journals also contain thoughts about heading to Denver International Airport, [[HarsherInHindsight hijacking a plane]], and [[UsefulNotes/TheWarOnTerror crashing it into a building]] in UsefulNotes/NewYorkCity, as well as [[RunForTheBorder fleeing to Mexico]]. The date of the massacre, April 20, coincides with UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler's birthday, which led some to speculate that the killers were neo-Nazis. However, most evidence suggests they had originally planned to attack the school on Monday, April 19, the anniversary of both the Oklahoma City bombing they hoped to top, and the conclusion of the fifty-day-long Waco Siege. They were forced to push it to the next day because a cache of ammunition they needed was delivered the night of the 19th. Others have speculated that they chose April 20 because it was the day that many of the school's [[TheStoner stoners]], whom they were generally apathetic towards, would be cutting class to get high ("4/20" and all).\
28\
29The killers arrived at the school at 11:10 AM, and went to the cafeteria with the large duffel bags containing their bombs, each wired to detonate at 11:17 AM, shortly after the start of lunch. Planting and priming the bombs, the two rushed back to their cars to wait for them to detonate. [[WheresTheKaboom The bombs failed]] thanks in part to [[EpicFail their lack of finesse in the finer points of bomb-making.]][[note]]The "bombs" in question were really crudely-made amalgamations consisting of carbon dioxide canisters, galvanized pipe, and metal propane bottles that were to be primed via a lit match. The weekend prior to the massacre, the two reportedly spent upwards of a few hundred dollars at local hardware stores and gas stations, buying a good amount of their stock. The bombs set to detonate within the cafeteria specifically were made from one 20 lb. (9.1 kg) propane tank each, with a gallon gas can attached.[[/note]] The only bomb that ended up detonating was a decoy that they had planted in a field near the school earlier that morning. Going off at 11:14, it caused a small fire, but since the explosion and subsequent fire occurred so close to the time the shooting began, it did nothing more than vaguely alert local authorities that ''something'' wasn't right.\
30\
31After realizing that their bombs were duds, the killers drew their firearms (a Hi-Point 995 9mm Carbine and [[SawedOffShotgun a Savage 67H sawed-off pump shotgun]] for Harris, and an [[GoodGunsBadGuns Intratec TEC-9 Mini]] and a Stevens 311D sawed-off double-barrel shotgun for Klebold) and headed to the school's west entrance. Here, they took off their trenchcoats, killed two students and wounded nine others as they marched their way towards the library. At 11:29, they arrived before the library, where the main body of the massacre took place. When they walked in, Harris told everybody wearing a white baseball cap -- a tradition amongst school athletes -- to stand up. Harris and Klebold would then kill ten people, and wound twelve others.\
32\
33Leaving the library at 11:42 AM, the killers then spent the next twenty minutes wandering the now-empty halls and cafeteria, shooting and throwing pipe bombs seemingly at random. They went back into the now-cleared library at 12:02 PM, and briefly exchanged fire with the police officers who had surrounded the school, with the killers failing to hit any targets. At approximately 12:08 PM, Harris [[AteHisGun fired his shotgun into his mouth]] and Klebold shot himself with his TEC-9 through his left temple. The last words of both killers was reported to be "One, two, three!"\
34\
35Early speculation said an anonymous third man had been involved in the shootings, based on reports that a strange man had been seen on the roof on the school (in actuality, he was a repairman who had locked himself up on the roof after he heard gunshots). Backing up this claim, others proposed that the two killers could not have hauled all of the bombs, especially the tanks tailor-made to detonate within the cafeteria, by themselves. All known evidence points to Harris and Klebold as the only culprits behind the massacre, but this has not stopped countless {{conspiracy theorist}}s from speculating otherwise.
36[[/folder]]
37
38[[folder:Aftermath]]
39Although school shootings are a relatively -- some would say distressingly -- common occurrence in the United States (there had been one almost every year [[OlderThanTheyThink since 1966]])[[note]]That said, the worst-ever attack on a school in the US remains [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bath_School_disaster the bombing of an elementary school]] in Bath Township, Michigan, which happened in 1927.[[/note]], the Columbine massacre quickly entered the halls of infamy for both its then-unprecedented scale and being the first major shooting spree to happen in the age of {{cell phone}}s and [[TwentyFourHourNewsNetworks the 24-hour, always-on-the-air news cycle]]. The massacre was covered on national news as it was happening, in a way that previous ones never were. Future school shootings, including those with far higher body counts like Virginia Tech (33 dead, 23 injured), Sandy Hook (28 dead, 2 injured), Stoneman Douglas (17 dead, 17 injured), and Robb Elementary (22 dead, 18 injured), would always find themselves in Columbine's shadow. The {{irony}} of all this media attention is that [[ThanatosGambit it gave Harris and Klebold exactly what they wanted]]: their names [[FameThroughInfamy burned into the history books, whether or not the historians writing said books took favor towards it]].\
40\
41The immediate aftermath of the massacre saw an untold number of [[UrbanLegends apocryphal events]] finding their way into the PopularHistory version of the shooting. MoralGuardians of all stripes used Columbine as an excuse to rant about whatever they felt was evil (or whatever would get them [[MoneyDearBoy the best book deals]]), everybody else was searching for answers, and American high schools came under the thrall of a number of Columbine-related concepts, some of which had never happened. The word "columbine", once the name of the state flower of Colorado, entered the vernacular as a euphemism for a school shooting, with many future school shooting plots making reference to "pulling a columbine" and a desire to "top" Harris and Klebold. Police forces, having witnessed firsthand how ineffective their traditional tactics were against spree killers who [[LeaveNoSurvivors had no interest in taking hostages]], began developing new responses to such threats.\
42\
43The image of the psychotic BadassLongcoat spree killer took off, not helped by the fact that ''Film/TheMatrix'' had been released three weeks prior to the shooting. In reality, the killers had [[TheCoatsAreOff taken their trenchcoats off]] as soon as the shooting began and wore ball caps, T-shirts, and jeans for the rest of it, leading many to believe that the coats were more about projecting a scary, iconic image to the victims and the media than anything. (If so, then it largely worked.) The change of clothes also succeeded in confusing early reports on how many shooters took part in the killing.\
44\
45Thanks to the media's early rush to judgment, students who were [[LonersAreFreaks socially isolated or seen as "outcasts"]] suddenly became viewed as potential mass murderers in waiting, even though Harris and Klebold weren't outcasts or a particular target of bullying. A pair of heavily-publicized school shootings in the two years prior, one in Paducah, Kentucky and one in Springfield, Oregon, had killers who did fit the profile of the "lonely outcast", so the media automatically assumed that the Columbine killers were loners as well. And despite early reports of the spree being a vengeance killing with a particular targeting of jocks, Christians, and minorities, all facts point to [[AxCrazy a random killing spree with no specific category of victim]]. (Of the aforementioned shootings, the only one in which the killer targeted a specific category of victim was [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heath_High_School_shooting the Kentucky shooting]], in which the killer fired upon a Christian prayer group.)\
46\
47In particular, the {{goth}} subculture suffered a huge backlash because of the shooting, as their outcast status and "dark" personas made everyone else suspicious. No evidence suggests either Klebold or Harris embraced the goth subculture, preferring a more militaristic vibe in their personal style. (And goths generally tend to be passive and pacifistic, with the old stereotype being that they are violent towards [[SelfHarm themselves]] rather than others.) In any case, numerous schools modified their dress codes to ban trenchcoats and band merchandise as well as restrict the amount of black clothing a student could wear, and goth culture, which had flourished within the '90s counterculture, quickly receded from the public eye in response, soon displaced by the rise of {{emo}} in the '00s.\
48\
49One of the worst consequences of the shooting was how many schools began assuming that all school shooters fell under a certain list of stereotypes and could therefore be identified before they killed (similar to a terrorist watchlist). In a Congress-mandated study, the UsefulNotes/{{FBI}} found that this idea was both untrue and a dangerous line of thought: If schools focused on trying to find students who fit a predetermined list of traits, real potential shooters could go unnoticed. Even so, if a school shooter is portrayed in the media, he--and [[AlwaysMale it is usually a "he"]]--will always be a shy, bullied student who keeps to himself, and this happens almost entirely because of this misconception.\
50\
51[[MurderSimulators Violent video games]] became one of the most popular scapegoats for the massacre after the media learned that Harris and Klebold were fans of ''VideoGame/{{Doom}}'' and ''VideoGame/Wolfenstein3D''. Armchair psychologists claimed that the killers had become desensitized to, and obsessed with, realistic violence as a result of playing such games. Infamous attorney Jack Thompson entered the public consciousness as an anti-video game activist because of the massacre, which began a career trajectory that would ultimately lead to his disbarment. Once people learned that Harris had made [[GameMod various levels]] for the game, the media almost immediately began claiming that those levels had been based on Columbine High School, with the demons replaced with students and teachers. Neither of those claims held true. The most elaborate of the so-called "Harris levels", titled "UAC Labs", can be downloaded [[http://www.doomworld.com/10years/bestwads/infamous.php at doomworld.com]] (third down the list) alongside commentary on the massacre and its effect on the gaming community.\
52\
53Certain popular movies either liked by or seemingly connected to the killers also became targets for the ire of media watchdogs and concerned parents alike. ''Film/TheMatrix'' topped this list thanks to its heavily-stylized action scenes, a story about our reality being a lie, a proliferation of BadassLongcoat heroes, and the fact that it had been released three weeks prior to the killings (and was still a box office hit). ''Film/TheBasketballDiaries'' was another major target due to [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1sfAZYmMig4 a fantasy sequence]] in which Creator/LeonardoDiCaprio's character shoots up his school while wearing a trenchcoat. ''Film/NaturalBornKillers'', which both of the killers were huge fans of, came under fire for a plot that eerily mirrored the aftermath of the shooting. Less associated with the massacre, but a strong influence--particularly for Klebold--was the David Lynch film ''Film/LostHighway''.\
54\
55The massacre also re-ignited the debate on [[UsefulNotes/AmericanGunPolitics gun control]], with each side repeating its talking points. Gun control advocates said the tragedy could have been averted had there been more restrictions on the purchase of firearms, noting that Harris and Klebold had acquired their weapons through (mostly) legal means, specifically counting on the lack of background checks at gun shows.[[note]]By "legal", we mean in the sense that they did not steal their guns or go through the black market to get them; instead, they had Klebold's friend, Robyn Anderson, purchase the guns for them (a straw purchase), which is a felony offense in the US. Ever see one of those "Don't Lie for the Other Guy" posters at gun stores? This is why.[[/note]] On the other side, gun rights advocates claimed that gun control, particularly the "gun-free" zones around schools, had left the students and teachers defenseless, which made the situation worse than it had to be. While Colorado would soon close the "gun show loophole" in-state, no significant federal gun control legislation was passed as a result of the shooting, and five years later, the federal Assault Weapons Ban would expire without being renewed.\
56\
57As for schools themselves, they began taking security into their own hands. Schools across the nation installed metal detectors at entrances, hired security guards, mandated see-through backpacks, ran "intruder drills" (similar to fire drills) in order to practice what to do in case of a "active shooter event", and crafted "zero tolerance" policies regarding violence, the threat of violence, or even the perception of a threat. Those policies soon became controversial as many people, particularly students and social scientists, felt they had grown out of control and infringed upon the rights of students. A report by the Secret Service said that schools were taking false hope in such security measures--that not only would they do nothing to deter another massacre, but might push an unstable student [[DisproportionateRetribution suspended or expelled for a minor infraction]] over the edge and ''cause'' another massacre. Minority students were almost always disproportionately targeted by "zero tolerance" policies, too. But to this day, many schools still have "zero tolerance" policies in place, since the criticism received for punishing the relatively innocent is far easier to deal with than the perceived culpability for letting a violent situation escalate.\
58\
59Various conservative Christian groups claimed the massacre was a result of the secularization of society, the [[ScienceIsBad teaching of evolution]] and sex education, and a lack of religion in public schools. People within these groups--not all, but many--were more inclined to accept initial accounts that said two of the victims, Cassie Bernall and Rachel Scott, had been killed because of their Christian faith. Bernall was the most visible example, with the story going that Bernall was asked about her faith in God, and that when she answered yes, she was killed. Most authoritative investigations of the massacre concluded that the stories of how Bernall died was [[UrbanLegends apocryphal]] and based on the experience of Valeen Schnurr, a survivor who confirmed that the killers asked her if she believed in God, but subsequently spared her. Similarly, the exchange between Scott and her killers is based on conflicting accounts given by a student who was wounded alongside Rachel when she was killed, so the story cannot be conclusively verified. Despite this controversy, many religious groups still consider Bernall and Scott to be martyrs and symbols of faith in the face of death, and a number of Columbine-inspired works created since their deaths have portrayed their killers as specifically targeting Christians. At least two future spree killers, [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umpqua_Community_College_shooting Umpqua Community College]] shooter Christopher Harper-Mercer and [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Lake_shootings Red Lake High School]] shooter Jeff Weise, asked at least one of their victims if they believed in God, likely as a sick homage to this urban legend.\
60\
61One of the most popular targets of social backlash was [[TheNewRockAndRoll shock rock, metal, and other "Satanic", "unhealthy", or "violent" music]], with ShockRock musician and provocateur Music/MarilynManson becoming the lightning rod for those genres. In reality, Harris viewed Manson as a sellout and a poser, while Klebold was only a casual fan at best. According to Klebold's mother, he had a Marilyn Manson poster in his room, but when asked about it, he said he paid more attention to the music than the words. The facts did not stop people from claiming that Manson's music had somehow influenced the two to shoot up their school. While the massacre greatly increased his pop culture profile, it also did lasting damage to his mainstream success, which never again returned to the heights of ''Antichrist Superstar''. His interview with Creator/MichaelMoore about the shooting, which contains the quote found at the top of this page, has since been cited as the singular point when the public's perception of him shifted from from a grotesque antichrist to an intelligent human with one of the most articulate and insightful takes on the situation shared by someone at his stature.\
62\
63Thanks to the date of the massacre, rumors emerged that the killers were either [[ThoseWackyNazis neo-Nazis]] or had a fascination with UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler and [[UsefulNotes/NaziGermany his regime]]. Supporters of this theory point to the date of the massacre, Hitler's birthday of April 20, and the fact that the killers were fans of Music/{{Rammstein}} and Music/{{KMFDM}}, two bands often hit with accusations of being MusicToInvadePolandTo. Robyn Anderson and Devon Adams, who were close friends with Klebold, denied that either of the boys were neo-Nazis. Additionally, Klebold's mother was Jewish (although his father was Lutheran), and videotapes recorded by both boys before the massacre referred to it being planned for a following Monday, not Tuesday. Klebold's mother [[http://forward.com/news/breaking-news/333862/columbine-shooter-had-jewish-roots-dreaded-passover-seder/ later described]] an incident a few weeks before the shooting where Dylan refused to attend the family's Passover seder, saying that Harris learning of Klebold being Jewish created a temporarily tense moment between them. Most likely, the killers considered the Nazi regime's [[TheSocialDarwinist social Darwinism]] and policy of genocide and extermination as philosophically appealing, but viewed [[MisanthropeSupreme all of humanity]] as "the enemy" rather than any specific ethnic group. Harris in particular had a distinct tendency for PuttingOnTheReich with Nazi salutes and quotations, if apparently mainly for [[{{Troll}} shock value]].\
64\
65Harris had been taking the anti-depressants Luvox and, before that, Zoloft, which became a point of note for many people critical of the perceived over-prescription of psychiatric medication in today's society, particularly amongst teenagers. Later investigations discovered that Harris had been rejected for military service due to his use of these medications. People then speculated that this rejection either drove him over the edge or led to him [[NoMedicationForMe going off his meds]] in an attempt to be accepted. In truth, Harris had not received news of his rejection by the time of the massacre, and both he and Klebold were planning the shooting long before the recruiter had cold-called him.\
66\
67The media also tossed allegations of [[AdultsAreUseless neglectful parenting]] at the killers' parents, as people claimed that, had they been paying any attention to their kids, they could have stepped in and stopped it. In the so-called "Basement Tapes" recorded before the killing, Harris and Klebold absolved their parents of responsibility and joked at how adept they were at fooling them. This is especially true for Klebold, since all the weaponry and tools for the massacre were stored at Harris's house. At the very least, the killers wanted the shooting to be perceived as an act carried out by them and them alone.\
68\
69Ultimately, one of the most popular culprits for the shootings was [[SocietyIsToBlame society in general]]. For the first time, there was genuine examination and criticism of the [[PopularityFoodChain social hierarchy]] of high school, particularly the high status that athletes enjoy within it. Schools began to crack down on bullying within their halls, and most people who were of school age soon after Columbine will most likely recall all of the assemblies calling for tolerance and respect for fellow classmates. The fact that we still have the PopularityFoodChain shows that such efforts were futile, and 1999 became ancient history for a new generation of high school students who were only in elementary school when the shooting took place. It took [[HereWeGoAgain another cycle]] of bullying-related suicides a decade later before people started asking these questions again.\
70\
71And before anybody asks: yes, there are conspiracy theories claiming that Harris and Klebold had been {{brainwashed}} by TheIlluminati, serving as patsies to advance draconian new gun control laws. Even if this were true--which it is not--the plan was a failure, since (as noted above) no serious gun legislation passed in the wake of the shooting.\
72\
73In the aftermath of the massacre, an aura developed around Harris and Klebold, with many students on the bottom of the high school food chain calling them [[HeroicSacrifice heroes and martyrs]] who stood up to the [[JerkJock privileged jocks]] and [[TheBully bullies]] that ruled high schools across the nation. Trenchcoats became [[TheRedStapler a popular fashion accessory]] among such students, to which schools responded by banning such coats under their dress codes. A series of [[JackTheRipoff copycat shootings]] took place, carried out mostly by people who wanted to get revenge on their classmates and, like Harris and Klebold, leave their mark on the world. Even over two decades later, a quick search will find a surprisingly large number of tribute sites and videos for "Reb and [=VoDKa=]". The vast majority of these sites condemn the shooting but express the sentiment that Klebold and, to a lesser extent, Harris were kind, intelligent boys before suffering mental illness and (in Klebold's case) falling in with perhaps the worst influence possible, and that people should see this side of them as well.\
74\
75But perhaps the most important effect of the massacre was the way that it shaped American popular culture for years to come. The most noticeable and immediate change was a trend of [[MediaWatchdog stiffer censorship]] against violence in movies and TV shows that lasted well into the TurnOfTheMillennium, and picked up further steam after [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Super_Bowl_XXXVIII_halftime_show_controversy the infamous Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show]]. The teen {{horror}} genre, popularized by the likes of ''Film/Scream1996'', was all but dead by 2002 as depictions of young people being brutally murdered suddenly became [[DistancedFromCurrentEvents too unsettling]] for both the MoralGuardians and the target audiences of such media, and while ultraviolent horror movies did make a comeback soon after, the TorturePorn films of the '00s featured mostly adult protagonists. After a period of "too soon", school shootings became [[AxesAtSchool popular subject matter]] for RippedFromTheHeadlines programs, with the canonical example being the ''Series/LawAndOrder'' episode "School Daze", which was one of the first episodes of television to be advertised with such a slogan. The Columbine massacre, together with Woodstock '99 a few months later, arguably marked the beginning of the end for the viewpoints and culture of TheNineties, almost as much as the [[Film/GimmeShelter1970 Altamont]] [[AllBikersAreHellsAngels disaster]] and the [[UsefulNotes/CharlesManson Manson Family murders]] are said to have killed TheSixties, with the time between April 20, 1999 and [[UsefulNotes/TheWarOnTerror September 11, 2001]] marking [[EndOfAnEra a period of transition]] between TheNineties and the TurnOfTheMillennium.
76[[/folder]]
77----
78!!Media that is about, references, or was affected by the Columbine shooting by HarsherInHindsight and DistancedFromCurrentEvents:
79[[foldercontrol]]
80[[folder:Comic Books]]
81* The unpublished September 1999 issue of ''ComicBook/{{Hellblazer}}'', entitled "Shoot", depicted a study of a series of fictional school shootings. The plot revolved around the idea that [[spoiler:modern life is so banal and empty that many school shooting victims want to die, and the title was one of the victims giving an instruction to the killer]]. Since it was set to come out just five months after Columbine, one can imagine [[DistancedFromCurrentEvents why DC withheld it from publication]].
82* The cover of ''ComicBook/{{Preacher}}'' #52 was originally supposed to depict an eight-year-old [[ActionGirl Tulip O'Hare]] receiving a handgun as a Christmas present. After Columbine, the image was changed to a standard facial shot of an adult Tulip.
83* Century Part III of Creator/AlanMoore's ''ComicBook/TheLeagueOfExtraordinaryGentlemen'' features a parody of ''Franchise/HarryPotter'' where TheHero goes crazy and proceeds to massacre his entire supporting cast. The event is presented and compared in-panel to a classic school shooting.
84[[/folder]]
85
86[[folder:Fanfic]]
87* ''Fanfic/HitList'' is a ''Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda'' HighSchoolAU where a group of students, led by Ganondorf, plant and detonate bombs around exits in the school and take hundreds of people hostage.
88* ''[[Fanfic/BlasterTheWigglytuffGuildMassacre Blaster: The Wigglytuff Guild Massacre]]'' is a ''VideoGame/PokemonMysteryDungeon'' fanfic with a simple premise, showing a human serial killer entering the PMD world as a female Meowstic, with her AK-47 being brought with her. Using it, she committs a mass shooting at the Wigglytuff Guild. The Columbine massacre is even mentioned at the beginning.
89[[/folder]]
90
91[[folder:Films -- Animated]]
92* Creator/WarnerBros initially censored parts of ''WesternAnimation/BatmanBeyondReturnOfTheJoker'' as a direct response to Columbine. The studio later released the original version of the film as the "uncut" version; the edited version has since become harder to find, legally or otherwise.
93* The original theatrical poster for ''WesternAnimation/TitanAE'' had Cale Tucker running around shooting a laser gun, followed by love interest Akima. This was released during the fallout of the massacre, however, and movie studios were facing heavy criticism for violence in films. For the VHS and DVD box art, Cale makes the same running pose, but this time shows Akima the map with his hand outstretched toward it in place of the gun.
94[[/folder]]
95
96[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
97* Creator/MichaelMoore's documentary ''Film/BowlingForColumbine'' examines [[UsefulNotes/AmericanGunPolitics America's obsession with guns and violence]], suggesting that it played a role in the shooting and pointing out that the [=NRA=] has done little to restrict the purchase of guns and ammunition for less-than-wholesome purposes. Moore also goes out of his way to state that guns themselves are not the problem, showcasing how Canada has a comparatively low rate of gun violence despite gun ownership rates being almost as high as in the United States. (As the saying goes: guns don't kill people, people kill people.[[note]]This is not to say, however, that someone with a gun, or even a knife, won't kill another living thing much more efficiently than someone who has no such thing.[[/note]]) The film's general theme is that no one has easy answers for the massacre. After all, both Harris and Klebold were bowlers--[[HitlerAteSugar could that have driven them to kill]]?
98** He also sharply criticizes [[StrawmanNewsMedia the American media]] for doing nothing but broadcasting [[IfItBleedsItLeads sensationalized stories]] and ramping up [[MediaScaremongering national paranoia and fear]] to the point where, rather than being a warning sign screaming for societal re-address, the massacre fuelled terror and finger-pointing by MoralGuardians that wouldn't be seen again until [[UsefulNotes/TheWarOnTerror 9/11 made terror into a war]].
99** One of the shooting's most popular scapegoats, Music/MarilynManson, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qM_WuQdg-sY gave his insight on the deal.]] (See also his entry on Music, below.)
100* ''Film/TheBasketballDiaries'' was criticized for a scene where, in an ImagineSpot, the main character (portrayed by Leonardo [=DiCaprio=]) comes to school dressed in a trench coat and armed with a shotgun, then shoots several classmates that he hates. The rest of the film has nothing to do with school violence, yet the scene is still uncomfortable to watch even today.
101* A number of indie films are basically retellings of the Columbine massacre and the events that followed, albeit with the names changed:
102** The Gus Van Sant film ''Film/Elephant2003'' is probably the most well-publicized of these films.
103** ''Film/HeartOfAmerica'' is Creator/UweBoll's version of the concept.
104** ''Film/ZeroDay'' centers on the killers' preparations and home videos, presenting them in the style of a {{found footage film|s}}.
105** ''Home Room'' focused more on the aftermath of the shooting.
106** ''American Yearbook''.
107** ''Film/AprilShowers'' was written and directed by a man who was a senior at Columbine when the massacre took place.
108** The Estonian film ''{{Film/Klass}}'' involves two boys being horrifically bullied until they come to school with guns and kill their tormentors.
109* ''Film/NaturalBornKillers'', which was already a controversial film due to its violence, received heavier criticism after the massacre. The killers themselves called their rampage "NBK" as a reference to the movie.
110* The BlackComedy ExploitationFilm ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duck!_The_Carbine_High_Massacre Duck! The Carbine High Massacre]],'' released exactly one year after Columbine, was the first film made about the killings. It is also, without any doubt, [[CrossesTheLineTwice the most]] [[BlackComedy tasteless]] of such films. The filmmakers were arrested and briefly imprisoned for bringing guns onto school grounds to shoot their movie--something that they proudly boasted about on the film's cover. What else would you expect from a film made by two guys from {{J|oisey}}ersey calling themselves William Hellfire and Joey Smack?
111* The MadeForTVMovie ''Film/AtomicTrain'' was not shown in UsefulNotes/{{Denver}} out of apparent sympathy for the Columbine massacre. The movie had absolutely nothing to do with schools, shootings, or anything like it; it was [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin a nuclear train]], albeit one wherein the inevitable happens near Denver.
112* Officially, Creator/ToeiCompany took so long to give ''Film/BattleRoyale'' [[NoExportForYou a proper release]] in the United States because of their demands that it get a national theatrical release and a marketing campaign on par with the average SummerBlockbuster. But many fans of the film feel that lingering squeamishness over the film's subject matter--high school kids being forced to kill each other--also played a role in the 13(!)-year delay, and that the demands they made were a SnipeHunt designed to dissuade any American distributor from opening them up to lawsuits from American MoralGuardians.
113** This is also one of the two major reasons why the American remake is stuck in DevelopmentHell.[[note]]The second, at least since 2012, is [[http://blogs.wsj.com/speakeasy/2012/03/23/the-hunger-games-vs-battle-royale/ the unintentionally-similar]] ''Film/TheHungerGames''.[[/note]] Nobody wants the controversy that would accompany a film like this. In fact, when the remake was announced, one major ''Battle Royale'' fansite had the headline "HELL FREEZES OVER".
114* Creator/TimBurton's 2005 adaptation of ''Film/CharlieAndTheChocolateFactory'' had Mike Teavee, now a video game addict as opposed to a TV addict in the original, come from suburban Denver, Colorado. This was possibly a subtle reference to the Columbine massacre, particularly the role that [[UltraSuperDeathGoreFestChainsawer3000 violent video games]] [[MurderSimulators allegedly played]] in it. When introduced to Mike in this film, the first thing viewers see is the exterior of a house accompanied by the sound of bullets echoing through the air and flashes of light through the windows. The caption saying "Denver, Colorado" does not help matters here.
115* ''Film/TheBoondockSaints'' had its American theatrical release limited to just five theaters partly as a result of the Columbine massacre.[[note]]The chief reason, however, was because of PrimaDonnaDirector Troy Duffy's gigantic ego, which led him to burn all his bridges with distributor Miramax.[[/note]] The film essentially became a DirectToVideo affair as a result.
116* Being released just ten days after the massacre is often cited as the reason why the HorrorComedy film ''Film/IdleHands'' flopped at the box office. The film's plot involves a boy's hand being [[DemonicPossession possessed by a demon]], causing him to kill his parents and his best friends, and the climax involves the hand going on a bloodthirsty rampage at the HighSchoolDance.
117* ''Film/TheMatrix'' was released three weeks before the massacre. It was soon accused of inspiring the shooters due to the "[[BadassLongcoat action hero in a trench coat]]" look it popularized.
118* The film ''Dawn Anna'', starring Debra Winger in the title role, was about the mother of one of the victims of the shooting; it detailed her struggles with brain cancer not long after meeting her future husband. After being cured of the disease, her daughter, Lauren Townsend (played by a young Creator/{{Tatiana|Maslany}} [[Series/OrphanBlack Maslany]]), is [[DiabolusExMachina killed in the Columbine massacre]]. Are you surprised that it is a [[LifetimeMovieOfTheWeek Lifetime movie]]?
119* ''The Life Before Her Eyes'', starring Creator/UmaThurman and Creator/EvanRachelWood, is about a woman who survived a Columbine-style massacre fifteen years prior and whose present-day life is falling apart due to her SurvivorGuilt.
120* The [[http://www.imdb.com/media/rm377260288/tt1390535 original poster]] for ''Film/TheFinal'' was clearly designed to invoke the massacre. The DVD release did not use it, and you should not have to guess why.
121* ''Film/GingerSnaps'' was hit with Columbine-related controversy [[UsefulNotes/{{Canada}} north of the border]]. News that Telefilm Canada was funding a "[[CowboyBebopAtHisComputer teen slasher flick]]" with a {{goth}} protagonist right after both Columbine and a copycat shooting in Alberta caused a media frenzy, which forced Telefilm Canada to publicly defend their decision. In the end, all the clamor may have helped a small, independent horror film [[NoSuchThingAsBadPublicity gain wider recognition]], as it wound up becoming the fifth highest-grossing Canadian film that year.
122* ''Film/Scream3'' was heavily rewritten in the wake of Columbine in order to tone down the violence. According to [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3HaYYh-aIz0 this interview]] and other sources, the original script revolved around Sidney's return to Woodsboro with [[spoiler:Stu from the first film]] returning as the main killer. The effect of the massacre is also discussed within the film itself. One of the producers of the [[ShowWithinAShow Film Within a Film]] ''Stab 3'' notes how violence in cinema has become a touchy subject recently, with Columbine being the unstated-yet-obvious reason why.
123* The director and writer of ''Film/TheDirties'' were largely influenced and haunted by Columbine.
124* The 2016 Creator/{{Pureflix}} film ''Film/ImNotAshamed'' is based around Columbine victim Rachel Scott, including a scend where the killers ask her if she believes in God.
125* When ''Film/{{Heathers}}'' was made, much of the humor came from the ''absurdity'' of the idea of white, upper-class high school students killing each other. Then Columbine happened, which ended up sucking all the BlackComedy fun out of the movie. It doesn't help that the Columbine killers resembled [[BigBad J.D.]] in several ways.
126* The protagonist Celeste in ''Film/VoxLux'', narrowly survives a massacre that somewhat resembles Columbine, in both the year (1999), notoriety, a trench coat wearing killer, and a conversation between a shooter and a young teenage girl who talks to the protagonist about God before being shot and surviving.
127* Jay Bauman of WebVideo/RedLetterMedia on an episode of ''WebVideo/BestOfTheWorst'' describes ''Film/Turbulence3HeavyMetal'' thusly:
128-->''This movie is a little time capsule of a very specific period of time, which is: post-Columbine, pre-9/11. That little window of just a few years, when Music/MarilynManson was super popular and you could still find tons and tons of box cutters all over airplanes.''
129[[/folder]]
130
131[[folder:Literature]]
132* Creator/StephenKing:
133** He once referred to Carrie White, the titular AntiVillain [[VillainProtagonist Protagonist]] of ''Literature/{{Carrie}}'', as a DistaffCounterpart to the Columbine gunmen.
134** ''Literature/Rage1977'', the first novel he published under the Richard Bachman PenName, was about a school shooting. King had already pulled it from circulation in 1997 after a shooting in Paducah, Kentucky, and Columbine only made him more comfortable with his decision. Shortly after Columbine, he said that, had he written it then, it would've raised a slew of red flags and people would've thought he was mentally ill.
135--->''Now out of print, and a good thing.''
136* ''The Literature/AnarchistCookbook'' was one of Harris's favorite books. The bombs he and Klebold used (or rather, [[WheresTheKaboom tried to use]]) in the massacre were based on several of the book's instructions.
137* The book ''Literature/GiveABoyAGun'' is about two high school students who plan to shoot up their HighSchoolDance. The killers idolize Harris and Klebold, hoping to outdo Columbine with their own massacre.
138* ''Literature/WeNeedToTalkAboutKevin'' is written from the perspective of a school shooter's mother as she reviews her relationship with him over the course of his lifetime. Late in the book, he speaks of the Columbine shooters as [[SpotlightStealingSquad having stolen his spotlight]].
139* Parallels are drawn between Columbine and the school massacre that Freddy is responsible for in ''[[Franchise/ANightmareOnElmStreet Dreamspawn]]''. The massacre was blamed on the now-insane protagonist and her dead friends because they were [[LonersAreFreaks outcasts]]. This plot point is handled ''really'' {{Anvilicious}}ly, though.
140* Creator/JodiPicoult's ''Literature/NineteenMinutes'' is the story of a boy who shoots up his high school after being bullied and his crush abandons him to join the in-crowd responsible. At his trial, a psychiatrist cites Harris and Klebold as an example of school shooters.
141* Wally Lamb's fictional account, ''The Hour I First Believed,'' involves a Columbine English teacher who is on a leave of absence when he learns of the shooting; the resulting SurvivorsGuilt unravels his whole life.
142* Creator/DouglasCoupland's 2003 novel ''Hey Nostradamus!'', in which four characters describe the effects that a Columbine-like shooting had on them, was written out of the author's concern that not enough attention had been given to the victims of Columbine. His narrative pointedly avoids exploring the motivations of the two killers who carried out the in-novel shooting.
143** [[spoiler:Cheryl, who narrates the first vignette during or soon after her death at the hands of the two shooters,]] debunks an apocryphal explanation that Christians had been specifically targeted. This apparently alludes to similar myths that encircled the Columbine shooting.
144* Andrew Solomon's non-fiction book ''Far from the Tree: Parents, Children, and the Search for Identity'' profiles Klebold's parents and how they dealt with the aftermath of Columbine.
145* Dylan's mother, Susan Klebold, wrote a [[https://web.archive.org/web/20151028191540/http://www.oprah.com/world/Susan-Klebolds-O-Magazine-Essay-I-Will-Never-Know-Why moving essay]] for Oprah Magazine in 2009; she also wrote a book about her experiences that was published in 2016.
146* ''No Easy Answers'' by survivor Brooks Brown details his lifelong friendship with both Klebold and victim Rachel Scott, as well as the aftermath of the shooting--including attending Rachel's funeral and being treated like a suspect himself for his friendship with the two shooters.
147* Another non-fiction account, Dave Cullen's ''Columbine'', details the lives of the two shooters, the massacre itself, and the aftermath.
148* The Joe Goldberg novel ''Literature/YouLoveMe'' features a teenage girl with an obsessive crush on Dylan Klebold (the book is set in the 2020s, so she basically reveres his memory, to the extent that she literally wears t-shirts adorned with his face).
149[[/folder]]
150
151[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
152* Any TeenDrama or RippedFromTheHeadlines show in the early 2000s probably made reference to the massacre or school violence in general, with many of them doing a VerySpecialEpisode on the subject:
153** ''Series/LawAndOrder'': "School Daze"
154*** The SeriesFinale, "Rubber Room", [[SubvertedTrope subverts this]]: [[spoiler:a sacked ''teacher'' snaps and plots a rampage]].
155** ''Series/DegrassiTheNextGeneration'': "Time Stands Still (Part 2)"
156** ''Series/ColdCase'': "Rampage" is pretty much Columbine, but [[RecycledInSpace with a shopping mall]], and the massacre is set ''before'' Columbine
157** ''Series/OneTreeHill'': "With Tired Eyes, Tired Minds, Tired Souls, We Slept"
158** ''Series/{{Numb3rs}}'': "Dark Matter"
159** ''Series/{{Standoff}}'': "Peer Group"
160** ''Series/{{Flashpoint}}'': "Perfect Storm"[[note]]Ultimately a subversion, as the "shooter" never intended to kill anyone, just terrorize them the way they had terrorized him. His "victims" are surprised to be alive, but ultimately speak out for him when the police show up.[[/note]]
161** ''Series/JoanOfArcadia'': "The Uncertainty Principle"
162** ''Series/BostonPublic'': Despite being a series primarily set in a school, this show had only one episode involving a school massacre plot. In that episode, a student's notes describing a plan to bomb the school were found, but nothing comes of the plan, nor is it ever mentioned again.
163* ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer'' had two episodes in Season 3 affected by the shooting:
164** "[[Recap/BuffyTheVampireSlayerS3E18Earshot Earshot]]", which was set to air just four days after the shooting took place, was quickly pulled because the story was an AxesAtSchool plot about Buffy gaining telepathy and overhearing somebody thinking about killing students. It also featured a student climbing up into the school's bell tower with a sniper rifle [[spoiler:(he was actually trying to kill ''himself'', not the other students, but Buffy stopped him anyway)]].\
165\
166"Earshot" also featured Xander musing "who hasn't idly dreamed of gunning down their fellow students" and Oz remarking how school shootings were "bordering on trendy". Those lines would have almost certainly evoked the wrong reaction had it been shown on the original airdate.\
167\
168An additional irony: When "Earshot" was pulled from airing, Creator/TheWB aired a rerun of the episode "[[Recap/BuffyTheVampireSlayerS3E14BadGirls Bad Girls]]" in its place. The fact that said episode featured Faith murdering a man by accident, then nonchalantly telling Buffy that she didn't feel any guilt or remorse, made some people wonder what kind of message The [=WB=] wanted to send kids.
169** The SeasonFinale, "[[Recap/BuffyTheVampireSlayerS3E22GraduationDayPart2 Graduation Day (Part 2)]]", saw Buffy and the entire senior class blow up Sunnydale High to kill [[BigBad The Mayor]] after he [[OneWingedAngel turned into a giant snake monster]]. Fans had to wait until July and September of 1999 to see both episodes air.\
170\
171The WB also made Creator/JossWhedon edit that episode to make the school explosion less spectacular and remove dialogue from the last few scenes about how Buffy and the Scoobies thought it was "neat" that they blew up the school. But WB still dithered, right up to nearly the last minute, before deciding not to show the episode until later in the summer. They waited so long that [[ShortRunInPeru the episode had already been sent to stations in Canada that carried the show and placed into their broadcast schedule--and because it was a holiday weekend in Canada, the people with the authority to take it out of the schedule were "unavailable"]].\
172\
173Subsequent interviews have made it clear that just about everyone involved with the show thought that pulling "Earshot" was the right choice, but that banning "Graduation Day 2" was an embarassing over-reaction because of its much weaker connection to the event and much more fantastic plot.
174* A Season Four episode of ''Series/TheCloser'', "Time Bomb", centred on a group of just-out-of-high-school boys who talked about doing what the Columbine killers tried to do. [[spoiler:While most people assumed they were planning a school shooting/bombing, Fritz figures out that they were planning to set off bombs in a building and pick off the survivors as they fled. He and Brenda figure out what the target is--a shopping mall--[[OhCrap while inside it, when they spot the planted bombs]].]] Notably, the focus is not on high school dynamics, but on mass-murdering terrorists. [[spoiler:The high school is only important as that was how the boys knew each other]].
175* ''Series/SilentWitness'' did one of these episodes, but in the university where the pathology lab is situated. The two gunmen are clearly based on the Columbine shooters, [[spoiler:but in a twist, the Klebold-expy did not know that the Harris-expy was serious, and ended up shooting ''him'' to put a stop to the massacre. A third guy also tried to back out, so the Harris-expy murdered him prior to the massacre.]] As with Columbine, after a certain point the halls are cleared and everyone is hiding in locked rooms, cutting the massacre short. [[spoiler:And while Columbine was supposed to start off with a massive explosion, the university shooting was supposed to climax with a chemical weapons attack, but this time it was caught and stopped.]]
176* ''Series/AmericanHorrorStoryMurderHouse'' features a Columbine-esque shooting as [[spoiler:Tate's backstory. Driven to kill by the spirits inside the "Murder House", he shot up his school while wearing a trench coat and skull-like face paint, killing fifteen people before he was killed by the police.]] The episode where this is [[TheReveal revealed]] has [[spoiler:Tate's ghost]] confronted by the spirits of five of the victims, having built up years of rage, grilling him on why he did it. One girl, a former cheerleader, recounts a tale similar to the "do you believe in God?" incident often associated with Cassie Bernall; she answered "yes", only to find out, upon becoming a ghost rather than entering heaven, that she was wrong.
177* The ''Series/CriminalMinds'' episode "Painless" revolves around the anniversary of a school shooting, with the episode's unsub targeting the survivors. The unsub's motivation: [[spoiler:He was a fellow survivor that was ignored by the media in favor of more "photogenic" students, one of which stole his story of standing up to the gunman. The other "top ten" survivors were aware of this in a sense--they could not remember who stood up to the gunman, although they knew the stolen story was fake--but refused to clear up the truth]]. The original gunman [[AGodAmI thought he was God]] and was killing people ForTheEvulz before blowing himself up; [[spoiler:the second killer's other grievance is that the explosion cost him the ability to feel pain--hence the episode title--so he arguably suffered more than the other survivors and was braver than them, but they stole all the credit and attention.]]
178[[/folder]]
179
180[[folder:Music]]
181* Music/ThirdEyeBlind's second album "Blue", released in November 1999, almost always has the vocal track for "Slow Motion" wholly removed--or at least removed save for the chorus--because it clearly discusses various forms of violence as well as drug use. The song's opening line is "Ms. Jones taught me English / But I think I just shot her son". Frontman Stephan Jenkins wrote this song in 1995, however, so it predates both the band's debut album and the shooting.
182* Music/{{KMFDM}} received a fair share of blame for the massacre, aided by the fact that Harris was a fan of their music and posted the lyrics to some of their songs on his website. Their album ''Adios'' was released on the same day as the shooting.
183* The Music/MyChemicalRomance song "Teenagers" mocks both the tendency to demonize school violence and "outcast" groups in the wake of school shootings, and teenagers themselves who take umbrage at being treated like [[TeensAreMonsters vicious little monsters]] when they continue being casually cruel to one another.
184* After being MisBlamed for the massacre, Music/MarilynManson wrote the album ''Music/HolyWoodInTheShadowOfTheValleyOfDeath''. Most of the lyrics and subject matter were direct responses to Columbine, with Manson calling it "a declaration of war" on the MoralGuardians who had blamed him for the shooting.
185* On ''Music/TheMarshallMathersLP'', Music/{{Eminem}} defended both Manson and himself from the public backlash that erupted from Columbine with the single "The Way I Am". He claimed that middle-class suburbanites were hypocritical for only caring about violence once it started happening in their schools rather than [[InnerCitySchool the "ghetto" schools]].
186-->''When a dude's getting bullied and shoots up his school\
187And they blame it on Music/{{Marilyn|Manson}} and the [[DrugsAreBad heroin]]\
188[[ParentalNeglect Where were the parents at]], and look where it's at\
189Middle America, ''now'' it's a tragedy, ''now'' it's so sad to see\
190An upper-class city having this happening.''
191** Other lyrics that specifically mention the incident were censored in the song "I'm Back", even on the explicit version. Eminem would later repeat the censored lyric uncensored in his 2013 song "Rap God", as a bittersweet reminder that he isn't [[WhiteDwarfStarlet as big as he once was]].
192** On ''The Marshall Mathers LP'''s opening track, "Kill You", Slim Shady takes responsibility for the massacre -- "''Now it's too late -- I'm triple platinum and tragedies happened in two states!''"
193* The Music/{{Nightwish|Band}} song "The Kinslayer" is about the massacre. [[http://nightwish.com/en/band/lyrics?id=25 The lyrics]] even quote real dialogue between the killers and their victims. The fifteen candles mentioned near the end refer to those who died on that day--four pink ones for the female victims, nine blue ones for the male victims, and two black ones for the killers themselves.
194* Music/FiveIronFrenzy was from Denver; one of the band members lived three blocks from the school, and his sister was a student at Columbine who was there on that day. To say the incident hit home for them is an understatement. They eventually made the song "A New Hope" in response.
195* Not directly about the massacre, but "America's Suitehearts", a Music/FallOutBoy song about people getting famous for unsavory things, was written partially in response to the cult of celebrity around the killers that emerged on Platform/MySpace in the early 2000s.
196* The song "Youth of the Nation" by Music/{{POD}} was inspired by both Columbine and the Santana High shooting in California.
197* Five For Fighting's "Easy Tonight" was a response to the incident.
198* ChristianRock band Music/{{Flyleaf}}'s song "Cassie" is an ode to victims Cassie Bernall and Rachel Scott; it perpetuates the apocryphal stories about their final moments by describing Cassie as being shot for believing in God, even though Valeen Schnurr was the one who had that conversation (and survived).
199* Music/PearlJam's "Rival" is guitarist Stone Gossard's reflection on Columbine.
200** Tangentially related: After Columbine, the music video for the song "Jeremy", both of which were based in part on the 1991 suicide of Jeremy Wade Delle and were published years before the Columbine massacre, was pulled from rotation on music video stations. The video was already controversial well before Columbine, though.
201* ChristianRock musician Michael W. Smith wrote the song "This Is Your Time" as a reference to the (apocryphal) story of Cassie Bernall's martyrdom.
202* Music/FosterThePeople's "Pumped Up Kicks", while not about Columbine specifically[[note]]it relays a fictional scenario centered around a character who is driven to kill by being socially outcast and neglected[=/=]abused by their parents, none of which fit the profile of the Columbine killers[[/note]], was at least partially inspired by the event. The issue was close to the band as a whole; the bassist's first cousin was in the library at the time of the shooting.
203* Music/{{Wheatus}}'s 2000 hit "Teenage Dirtbag," written a year after the tragedy, originally included the lyric "Her boyfriend's a dick / And he brings a gun to school." Most releases of the song {{bowdlerize}} the lyric, as the label felt it was still "too soon". Tellingly, while the song is from the perspective of a [[LonersAreFreaks teenaged social outcast]] and largely [[WriteWhatYouKnow based on frontman Brendan B. Brown's own experiences being one]], the gun-wielder is described as [[EveryoneHasStandards unambiguously villainous]].
204* Music/{{Korn}}'s 2002 song "Thoughtless" describes the Columbine High School shooting through the eyes of Klebold and Harris; [[WordOfGod Jonathan Davis]] has said that the song is "about people [like Klebold and Harris] who are constantly ridiculed and the collateral damage it can cause".
205[[/folder]]
206
207[[folder:Stand-Up Comedy]]
208* In his "Bigger and Blacker" stand-up show, Creator/ChrisRock [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=33E9e25KUew mocked]] the gunmen's InformedLoner status[[note]]"The Trenchcoat Mafia! They're like, 'No one would play with us! We had no friends, the Trenchcoat Mafia...' Hey, I saw the yearbook picture, it was six of them! I ain't had six friends in high school--I don't got six friends now! Shit, that's three-on-three with a half court!"[[/note]], the MoralGuardians trying to make hay from the situation[[note]]"Who gives a ''fuck'' what they was watching? Whatever happened to ''[[AxCrazy crazy]]?''"[[/note]], and the people who treat violence in rich suburban (i.e., white) schools as anomalies while ignoring the same violence in {{inner city school}}s[[note]]"You're gonna have little white kids sayin', 'I wanna go to a black school where it's safe!'"[[/note]].
209[[/folder]]
210
211[[folder:Theater]]
212* The one-act stage play ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bang_Bang_You%27re_Dead Bang Bang You're Dead]]'', about an imprisoned high school killer who is confronted by the ghosts of his victims, was written before Columbine--though it was based on other, pre-Columbine school shootings--to raise awareness about school violence. The timeliness of its subject matter caused it to become incredibly popular in the wake of the Columbine shooting, with 15,000 performances taking place in the three years directly after the massacre. The play was later adapted into [[TheMovie a film]] by the {{Showtime}} network.
213* ''[[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Columbinus Columbinus]]'', a two-act play, focuses on Harris, Klebold, and other students at the school. The first act has generic names for the characters: Poser, Goth, Loner, Freak, etc. The second act names the characters and follows the actual shooting.
214* The 2014 play ''The Erlkings'' focused on--and was based on the journals and other information from--the killers.
215[[/folder]]
216
217[[folder:Theme Parks]]
218* ''Ride/MenInBlackAlienAttack'' at [[Ride/UniversalStudios Universal Studios Florida]] originally planned to feature the "Tiffany" cutout from the [[Film/MenInBlack first movie]] in the attraction's opening training scene for riders to shoot at. After Columbine, the park decided that doing so would be in extremely poor taste.
219[[/folder]]
220
221[[folder:Video Games]]
222* The [[WebOriginal freeware]] game ''VideoGame/SuperColumbineMassacreRPG'', made using UsefulNotes/RPGMaker, is based on the events of the shooting. The first half of the game follows Harris and Klebold through the massacre--from their morning preparations to their suicides--with occasional flashbacks to past events. MIDI [[SuspiciouslySimilarSong versions]] of Music/MarilynManson, Music/{{Rammstein}}, and Music/{{Nirvana}} songs serve as the game's soundtrack. The second half follows the two after they are [[PlanetHeck sent to]] [[FireAndBrimstoneHell Hell]], which turns out to be remarkably like ''VideoGame/{{Doom}}''; it ends with the two killing a Cyberdemon and becoming minions of Satan.\
223\
224According to interviews with creator Danny Ledonne, the game was made to explore hyperreality and the treatment of death in video games while allowing people to explore the massacre and the mindsets of Harris and Klebold in a way that only a video game can do. The game is set up like an old-school, turn-based JRPG, which denies players the visceral thrill of watching teenagers (who are all represented by crude 16-bit sprites) being brutally gunned down. The consequences of their violence are also shown: The first half ends with photos of their dead bodies, and the entire second half has them, literally, in Hell for their sins (though it's [[BrokenAesop slightly undercut]] by [[AHellOfATime what they wind up doing in Hell]]).
225* One of the first submissions that put {{Platform/Newgrounds}} on the map was site creator Tom Fulp's Columbine parody game ''[[http://www.newgrounds.com/portal/view/310349 Pico's School]]''. The setup: A bunch of goth/punk/neo-nazis kids went postal and turned the school into a battlefield. Now VideoGame/{{Pico}} must save the day by mowing down anything that moves--including InnocentBystanders, if you want--and killing the leader of the goths [[spoiler:who is an alien in disguise]] by ''[[GroinAttack shooting her groin with an assault rifle]]''. TheStinger reveals that the school opened again [[spoiler:with the goths replaced by gangster kids.]]
226* ''VideoGame/MorimiyaMiddleSchoolShooting'' is a game where you play as a school shooter, and fittingly contains references to Columbine and other shootings.
227* In the CrapsackWorld setting of ''VideoGame/DeusExHumanRevolution'', another Columbine massacre apparently happened, as an [=NPC=] will mention "the second time".
228* ''VideoGame/{{Doom}}'' was one of the many alleged inspirations for the killers, as they were both avid fans of the game. Harris made several custom maps for the game, which are still available for people to download. However, despite what some UrbanLegendOfZelda claim, these levels do not feature the Columbine high school's layout, nor their classmates' likeness as enemies.
229* Columbine is the reason why official Creator/{{Sega}} lightguns are region-locked out of the American Platform/SegaDreamcast, as the console was released less than five months after the shooting. Fans of games such as ''[[VideoGame/HouseOfTheDead The House of the Dead 2]]'' had to use the scant few low-quality third-party guns available just so they could play those games.
230* Relatedly, the shootings prompted Creator/{{Capcom}} to remove [=GunCon=] support from the US release of ''[[VideoGame/ResidentEvilGunSurvivor Resident Evil: Survivor]]''. ''Dino Stalker'' and ''Dead Aim'' were unaffected.
231* ''VideoGame/{{Persona 2}}'' was released as two games in Japan. The first game involved students armed with semi-automatics and Uzis fighting against a resurrected UsefulNotes/AdolfHitler, as well as being given the option to kill their school's principal. The second game was cleared for release in America only because two of the characters got a PlotRelevantAgeUp and everyone else was ignored.
232** Others have claimed that that the first game was banned mostly because the main character [[GayOption could be homosexual]]. Which would normally be okay, but unfortunately, [[DoubleStandard the main character is male]].
233* The ''VideoGame/{{Emogame}}'' series makes a number of references to the shooting. In the first game, the Hot Topic store sells Trenchcoat Mafia fashion accessories (including a Columbine High T-shirt), and both Harris and Klebold appear in the second game.
234* One of the longest sections in flash game ''[[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin The Game]]'''s sequel is an extended parody of the moral outrage following the shootings. It even features ''VideoGame/Left4Dead''[[SpoofAesop -based caricatures]].
235* The flash game ''[[VideoGame/TheClassroomTrilogy The Classroom]]'' references Columbine when a student brings a gun on the last day of school and kills a teacher and another student before turning the gun on himself.
236* Initial plans for the original ''VideoGame/PerfectDark'' included a function where players could take their picture with a Game Boy Camera, then put them into the game. After Columbine, the idea of people putting their classmates and teachers in the game to shoot them came up. Rare eventually pulled the feature before releasing the game.
237* ''VideoGame/KingpinLifeOfCrime'' had the unfortunate timing of being released in June 1999, just two months after the massacre. The developers, Xatrix Entertainment, became aware of the massacre and implemented a "safe" version[[note]]a password-protected game mode that featured low violence and bleeped out expletives[[/note]] in response to criticism in the National Institute on Media and the Family's 1999 report on violent video games. Drew Markham, the CEO of Xatrix, stated that the game was never meant for children anyway. MoralGuardians and {{Media Watchdog}}s still asked various retail stores--except for Electronics Boutique--to stop stocking the game.
238* One of the characters in the VehicularCombat game ''VideoGame/{{Vigilante 8}}'' drives a bright yellow school bus that is prominently featured on the game's cover art. After Columbine, the makers of the games did not want to risk being associated with anything that so much as reminded people of violence in a school setting; for both the sequel (''Second Offense'') and the Platform/XboxLiveArcade remake of the first game, they swapped the school bus for a prison bus. A [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jms2zOU2MZE television advertisement]] for the original game, which featured a trashed school bus, was pulled for the same reason.
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241[[folder:Webcomics]]
242* The initial StoryArc of ''Webcomic/{{Jack|DavidHopkins}}'' is based on the shootings.
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245[[folder:Web Original]]
246* ''[[https://www.newgrounds.com/portal/view/256156 Autumn Tree]]'', a Flash-animated short inspired by Columbine.
247* In the AlternateHistory story ''Literature/PlayerTwoStart'', one of the butterflies is that [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_Polly_Klaas Polly Klaas]] is never murdered, and she instead winds up becoming [[BeenThereShapedHistory a Forrest Gump-esque figure]] in the story. Her family moves to Littleton, Colorado in the late 1990s, and she enrolls in Columbine High School and interacts with Harris and Klebold. Her presence in the school has a profound impact on the shooting: Klebold drifts away from Harris and refuses to assist in his plot; Harris ultimately attempts to go it alone, but only manages to kill two people: Polly's best friend, Caitlyn, and [[DrivenToSuicide himself]]. Afterwards, a video game called ''The Darkest Night''[[note]]A witchcraft-themed, high school-set RPG for the Ultra Nintendo (TTL's version of the Platform/{{Nintendo 64}}) with similarities to ''Series/BuffyTheVampireSlayer''[[/note]] winds up having a ton of emotional resonance for Polly, given the similarities between its plot twists and her own experience of losing her friend, which leads her to become a researcher of video games at Stanford in adulthood.\
248\
249An even deadlier shooting two years later has a similar impact in Polly's world as Columbine did in reality. On the 14th of February 2001, [[spoiler:Christian Weston Chandler--yes, [[Webcomic/{{Sonichu}} Chris-Chan]]--shoots up his high school in Midlothian, Virginia, killing eighteen classmates (fourteen of them female) and three faculty members, one of whom was Creator/ShondaRhimes (her Hollywood career fizzled out in Polly's world and [[RichardNixonTheUsedCarSalesman she became an English teacher]]), before [[MurderSuicide turning the gun upon himself]].]] A similar backlash against video game violence erupts when people learn that [[spoiler:Chandler]] was a huge fan of games like ''Arbiter of Sin 2'', an [[UltraSuperDeathGoreFestChainsawer3000 ultraviolent]] FirstPersonShooter about a soldier turned minion of {{Satan}} fighting the forces of Heaven that [[RatedMForMoney seemed like it was designed to cause outrage]]. Infamous Florida attorney Jack Thompson, joined by eight of the victims' families, sue both Creator/{{Nintendo}} and Creator/{{Sega}}. On an even more depressing note: Just as our world's Columbine massacre led to the widespread distrust of {{goth}}s and [[LonersAreFreaks other teen outcasts]], the "Valentine's Day Massacre" of Polly's world leads to the stigmatizing of people on the autism spectrum after early reports--later determined to be untrue--claim that [[spoiler:Chandler]] was autistic. The phrase "sperging out" enters the lexicon to describe going on a mass murder spree, similar to GoingPostal, while anti-vaccination activists claim that vaccines are responsible for turning [[spoiler:Chandler]] into a murderous psychopath. In addition, a diary belonging to [[spoiler:Chandler]] detailing the owner's AmbiguousGenderIdentity is uncovered years after the massacre (reflecting how the [[spoiler:Chandler]] of our world eventually came out as transgender), dragging trans people into the debates surrounding the culprit.
250* While not the focus of the timeline, the Columbine massacre is mentioned in the AlternateHistory ''Literature/AGiantSuckingSound'' and is slightly worse than the real life massacre (Harris and Klebold succeed in burning the school down), with more media attention put on the killers' alleged Neo-Nazi ties due to their acts being seen within the context of a series of far-right terrorist attacks. [[spoiler:President Ann Richards chooses not to exploit the massacre for political gain and instead meets with victims of the massacre to listen to what they have to say.]]
251* The Columbine Massacre is the primary focus of the AlternateHistory story ''Literature/TerrorInLittleton''. In the timeline explored in this story, the bombs Harris and Klebold placed in the cafeteria exploded as they intended, and while they didn't collapse anything, it led to an even deadlier attack than what we got, not only resulting in the deaths of 269 people, including students, faculty, first responders, and [[InSpiteOfANail the shooters]], but also leaving the school itself in such poor condition that it's eventually torn down, with a new school being built where it once stood. The aftermath of the attack led to America becoming incredibly strict out of desperation to prevent another attack. The [[{{Goth}} emo subculture]] [[LonersAreFreaks becomes the subject of extreme prejudice]], stuff like black clothing and violent media is banned in several places (including homes and schools), and schools across the country (including colleges) adopt zero-tolerance policies. Not only does this result in situations such as a kid [[DisproportionateRetribution getting expelled from school for launching peas with a spoon]] [[DrivenToSuicide (and killing himself afterward)]], but it also results in a few changes in history, such as Creator/JamesRolfe getting expelled and arrested for his violent videos, and [[Platform/MicrosoftWindows Bill Gates]] receiving death threats for his appearance in an ad for VideoGame/{{Doom}}.
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255* ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'':
256** "[[Recap/FamilyGuyS8E17BrianAndStewie Brian & Stewie]]" has Stewie asking Brian why he has a gun in his safe deposit box despite his anti-gun beliefs, with Stewie noting that Brian cried after Columbine. When Brian says he cried was because Columbine was a national tragedy, Stewie says he feels it was "more of a regional tragedy".
257** On another episode, Lois tells Peter to masquerade as a high schooler, and he appears in the kitchen in a trenchcoat holding a gun and saying he wants to get back at the popular kids who ignored him. Lois tells Peter that he is supposed to be acting like a normal high schooler and he calls someone named "Lance" to tell him the plan is off. [[spoiler:The call comes a few moments too late, though.]]
258** "Colorado: More than Kobe and Columbine" is seen on a road sign in one episode.
259* Several ''WesternAnimation/KingOfTheHill'' episodes which dealt with mental illness, suicide, and death were not rerun on Denver-area Fox affiliates or syndicated on other area channels for some time after the massacre. These included the "Propane Boom" two-parter about the Mega-Lo-Mart explosion, Hank's ensuing fear of propane, and [[spoiler:Luanne's difficulty grieving for Buckley's death]]; "Pretty, Pretty Dresses", which was about Bill's suicidal depression; and "Dog Dale Afternoon", which contains a scene where Dale is [[ItMakesSenseInContext mistaken for a sniper in a college bell tower and Hank is later shot by police but survives since he is wearing a bulletproof vest]].
260** "Revenge of the Lutefisk," which is about the church accidentally being burned down, was scheduled to air on the day of the massacre but was pre-empted in Denver by continuing news coverage about Columbine. That episode was not shown or rerun for a long time there either.
261** One episode that Denver-area channels did air during this time was "Wings of the Dope", in which [[spoiler:Buckley comes back as an angel]]. Mike Judge [[https://www.goodreads.com/quotes/1330542-i-don-t-get-as-much-fan-mail-as-an-actor got a letter]] a month after that episode's premiere from a student at Columbine who was in the school during the shooting and had watched the episode. She said that the episode had helped her cope with the death of her boyfriend...who was one of the killers.
262* The ''WesternAnimation/StaticShock'' episode "Jimmy" had a bullied student shooting at a group of football players. It was one of several {{very special episode}}s on the show, and ended with a public service announcement about gun safety.
263* In one of the ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'' DVD commentaries, Creator/TreyParkerAndMattStone say that despite paving the way for many things to be acceptable on television today that were not acceptable in the 1990s (such as certain swear words, jokes about AIDS, and gay characters), due to the Columbine shooting, it was no longer acceptable for them to depict the boys with guns as the subject was no longer considered funny--especially since Matt Stone not only lived in Littleton, but had loosely based the town of South Park off of the area. Years later, they began doing it again, with the Season 22 premiere centered around lampooning school violence specifically.
264* Fox re-ran the "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS10E10VivaNedFlanders Viva Ned Flanders]]" episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'' on the same day as the massacre. The episode has Homer telling himself that Barney's birthday is on the same day as Adolf Hitler's--April 20th. All future re-runs of the episode replaced the date with July 15th--the same birthdate as Series/{{Lassie}}.
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268* ''Website/TheOnion'''s take on the subject: [[https://www.theonion.com/columbine-jocks-safely-resume-bullying-1819565299 Columbine Jocks Safely Resume Bullying]].
269** In 2013, Columbine was part of a [[https://www.theonion.com/10-things-that-will-make-you-super-nostalgic-for-the-9-1843592545 "10 Things That Will Make You SUPER Nostalgic For The '90s"]] slideshow of real photos, along with the Rwandan genocide, the Oklahoma City bombing, the Waco siege, [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking and Alan Alda]], in a brutal mockery of the NostalgiaFilter for the decade in TheNewTens.
270* The card game ''TabletopGame/{{Chrononauts}}'' has Columbine as one of the events on its timeline. The expansion has an identity where one of the goals is making sure the shooting happens, and the base game have several that require stopping it.
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