Shush Or Hush

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Revision as of 13:45, 13 May 2026 by Gatorbox (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''"Shush or Hush"''' is a phrase originating from an edit of the theatrical poster for the film ''Rush Hour'' made by Draco in 2014. The majority of the edits done to the poster involved rearranging and duplicating the available letters and phrases to anagram new words and taglines, the process of which colloquially became known as "shush or hush" within the Gatorbox community. Generally speaking, inventing new letters by way of splicing pieces together is frowned u...")
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"Shush or Hush" is a phrase originating from an edit of the theatrical poster for the film Rush Hour made by Draco in 2014. The majority of the edits done to the poster involved rearranging and duplicating the available letters and phrases to anagram new words and taglines, the process of which colloquially became known as "shush or hush" within the Gatorbox community. Generally speaking, inventing new letters by way of splicing pieces together is frowned upon; as a result of this the "shush or hush" phrase was created by way of the limitations of using only the available letters in the "Rush Hour" title.

Draco created several edits for films and video games and featured a collection of them in an early After Hours video. Among them was an edit of the box art to the game Gone Home which rearranged the letters to spell "oh no me homo", a joke that spoils the entire storyline of the game. This particular "shush or hush" edit received nominal use on Twitter primarily by users critical of the game. Despite its unintended and brief adoption by online trolls, Draco has stated multiple times that the "oh no me homo" gag is one of his personal favorite jokes he's ever written for Gatorbox.