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4th October 2022
03:53pm BST
Emily Mullen
With Halloween approaching at the end of the month, Twitter chat surrounding the show has now turned to whether people will dress up as the serial killer to frighten and entertain others.
Fans of the show are being urged not to out of respect for Dahmer's victims. In recent days, Whoopi Goldberg hit out at Netflix for the timing of the series, saying "If that were my family, I'd be enraged".
One social media user, Nicole Murray, shared her thoughts on the possibility, writing: “The constant lack of remorse for Dahmer’s victims on social media makes me believe many people are going dress as Jeffery Dahmer and his victims for Halloween and that is so sick.”
“And remember, dressing up as Ted Bundy or any real killer is not the same as dressing up as a fictional slasher,” another Twitter user, @Maumancillaa wrote.
“More so with the series that just came out, I don't want to see a f***ing Jeffrey Dahmer on Halloween.”
A third wrote: “Since it’s officially October I feel like people need to be reminded that serial killers are not Halloween costume.”
And a fourth user, @g0thwannabe, wrote: “No one wants to see your skinny blonde boyfriend dressed as Jeffery Dahmer. Real people were and still are affected. Victims’ trauma is not your Halloween costume.”
https://twitter.com/bean_greann/status/1576641054186835968?s=20&t=8h3sJ8_E59FKktBQmdrJcw
https://twitter.com/lucidwas_she/status/1576596211095642116?s=20&t=y834Upjg2He6Vib2K0dxTw
Last Halloween, the popularity of Squid Game, saw a stream of costume companies racing to cash-in, as the show remained in the top 1o until the end of November 2021.
The show's iconic green tracksuits became the go-to Halloween costume.
Chinese costume producers in Yiwu, Zhejiang Province, told the Global Times that daily sales of different costumes from the series reached as much as 3,000 units per day following the show’s rise and another worker in Futian, Guangdong Province said that their factory had to "work overtime" to meet the high demands.
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