The Controversial Witchcraft Experiment Kevin Neece performed was he screened Satania Sigils into a Black Mirror to contact the actual Three Norns, Hekate, and the real Fallen Angels that were the inspirational basis for Dante's Inferno to gain intuitive advice on how to write the movie. While none of these entities actually manifested in person, Kevin Neece received a form of Schizoaffective Intuition that allowed him to spice up his dialogue to a disturbing degree where everything began to sound lyrical and in rhyme. And random areas of the dialogue sounded very similar to the Iambic Pentameter method used by William Shakespeare if not perfectly accurate. Parts of the story and morals felt like they were taken from an unknown story in the Christian Bible when Kevin Neece himself had not read the Bible in decades, although they may have also been discussed in Godspell. Kevin Neece's practical joke was to write an NC-17 equivalent Bibleman Family Christian Store Movie about a descent into hell by invoking the real life Fallen Angels, which stood to risk seriously pissing off, offending, or frightening all of the Parental Church Groups who grew up watching Willie Aames Bibleman and McGee and Me. Kevin Neece's experiment viciously mocks the stereotype that A-List Hollywood Actors achieved their Fame and Fortune by Selling their Souls to the Devil by casting all of the A-List Hollywood Actors from Angel movies as the Demonic Fallen Angels known as the Nephilim to present a metaphor about how our Vices, Sins, Temptations, and Inner Struggles approach us not as enemies, but as our friends who lure us into their trap by appearing warm friendly welcoming and supportive of our self destructive vices.
Kevin Neece's Bibleman is his interpretation of what he felt Miles Peterson should have been, rather than what he actually was in the original Bibleman Television show. Tragically, The Bibleman Show is so much worse than Christian Propaganda aimed at Children, many of its messages feel religious cult brainwashed and wrongheaded by people who were filled with the best of intentions but could not look beyond the boundaries of their own religion to see the bigger picture. Why does Miles Peterson tell a little child that she should never trust her own feelings and expect God to solve all of her life problems... because Willie Aames suffered from an excessive lack of self control that repeatedly destroyed his life and could not trust himself to make the right decisions. The message implies that Willie Aames fell back on God as a crutch rather than learn to properly deal with his own life problems. The Bibleman Live show features an entire auditorium of children who are subjected to The Wacky Protestor, a villain impersonation of Jerry Lewis The Nutty Professor, who showcases Atheism as one of his Evil World Domination Schemes. This feels like Zealot Hate Group Propaganda intent on inspiring children to show disdain towards Atheists in the same manner that North Korea creates propaganda cartoons to influence their children to hate America. Kevin Neece's father was an Atheist. Willie Aames grandfather was also an Atheist.
Kevin Neece's Religious Theory presented in the movie is that all of the Demons in Hell would be more knowledgeable of the Christian Bible than most Christians and Catholics, having actually read the book from the front to the back, so that they could exploit it's fallacies and contradictions to manipulate Christians and Catholics into moments of Self Doubt against their own Faith. The fact that Jesus Christ, a Non Advocator of Violence preaching Love, who suffered at the hands of Public Torture and Crucifixion, would be exploited by The Catholic Church as a means of Control over Society during the Dark Ages through the tragically ironic means of Medieval Torture Devices and Extreme Violence, does not help things at all.
The Ideology of Christ, visually portrayed as Trey Parker from Orgazmo, is neither Christian nor Catholic. He is a Mormon. South Park made an episode mocking the origin story of Joseph Smith and the Golden Tablets to showcase how ridiculous their faith is, and Bad Goddess, a Fan Fiction spinoff, points out that the Book of Mormon is regarded as the Fan Fiction of the World of Religion. The explanation for why Joseph Smith may have been telling the truth is he lacked the educational background to write such an extensive history himself. Kevin Neece's Explanation for how Joseph Smith wrote the Book of Mormon is he may have secretly messed around with early Spirit Board Seance methods or Witchcraft Invocations resulting in Spiritual Medium Influence and when it came time to explain how he wrote the book, Joseph Smith blatantly lied to everyone about the Golden Tablets out of fear that they would lynch him as a Witch if he told them the Truth. It is entirely possible that the spirit or demon Joseph Smith received his information from was playing a practical joke on him and came from a time where Polygamous Relationships were acceptable, explaining why Mormons engaged in the practice of Multiple Wives. The Commercial Ouija Board was released in 1890 though it was based on Spirit Board models used in 1886. The Book of Mormon was published in 1830. Kevin Neece's Autobiography features random moments which he alleges were the result of Spiritual Possession due to him burning his Ouija Board, most notably Chapter Three "The Year of Unbridled Failure", which rails off on a wild apocalyptic tangent about Angelic Muses using their Influence on Hollywood Films to foreshadow the downfall of our Modern Day Society, and the Mokkurkalfi Report articles written for United States Congress. Kevin Neece self destructive descent into the Occult resulted in him being married to a Spirit Wife to teach him a lesson about why the plot of Ah My Goddess doesn't really work in Real Life like it does in the Anime Series, and she sometimes "jumps in" to help spice up his writing, his scripts, and his articles.
Kevin Neece notes that while he has no real way to confirm his spirit wife's true identity as she is always silent, invisible, and observant, like one of life's great watchers, the Goddess of Fate whose dialogue was touched up the most during the making of this movie was Urd, and her dialogue came out shockingly more sexual and iambic pentameter wise than what Kevin Neece originally intended. In Norse Mythology, Urd was the Goddess who began weaving the Thread of Fate representing the conception of a person's life. And most human beings are conceived via the act of sexual procreation, hence the explanation for why Urd is presented as having an extremely sexual nature. Could it be possible that Urd's dialogue about Carl the Bartender was based on a real actual person from Norway.