The character’s design is distinct: bright colors, oversized eyes, and a vocalization style that relies heavily on screeches and gibberish. For a YTP editor, Guy Diamond is a musical instrument. His squawks are easily pitch-shifted to create songs, and his blank stares are perfect for "stare-down" effects. The phrase "DUN DUN DUN!"—often associated with dramatic reveals—became a signature sound bite for the character, spawning hundreds of videos titled things like "Guy Diamond Says Dun Dun Dun for 10 Hours."

While The Croods might seem like an unlikely candidate for deep analysis, its presence in the YTP sphere highlights how internet subcultures reclaim corporate media. By breaking the film down into a series of "earrapes," "stutters," and "sus" jokes, creators strip away the polished Hollywood sheen to find something raw and unpredictable. It turns a billion-dollar franchise back into a "caveman" state—devolved, chaotic, and loud.

And honestly? They wouldn't be entirely wrong.

Long after the sequels stop coming and Nicolas Cage retires from voice acting, the YTPs will remain—archived on obscure hard drives and Google Drives. In the future, archaeologists (perhaps the descendants of the Croods themselves) will dig up these videos and assume our civilization was powered entirely by the Grug scream and bad MIDI beats.

: Sudden, jarring spikes in volume, often during Grug’s many yells or screams. Why This Movie?

When DreamWorks released The Croods in 2013, it was a tale of survival, family bonds, and prehistoric wonder. But in the hands of the internet’s most chaotic editors, it became something else entirely: (YouTube Poop). This subgenre of remix culture takes the heartwarming story of Grug and his family and twists it into a psychedelic, slapstick, and often nonsensical fever dream. What is a "The Croods" YTP?