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People Party At The Pool Until 4AM, Man Responds With The Pettiest Music Loop Ever

by Annie Nguyen
January 13, 2026
in Social Issues

Shared living spaces only work when everyone agrees to play by the same rules. Most people understand quiet hours exist for a reason, especially in apartment complexes where privacy is already limited. When those boundaries are ignored, resentment tends to build quietly before boiling over.

That is exactly what happened to a tenant whose bedroom sits directly beside a pool area that seems to attract late night chaos. Despite clearly posted closing times, groups kept lingering for hours, laughing, yelling, and blasting music well past midnight. Complaints went unanswered, and official help proved useless.

Feeling stuck, the Redditor chose a solution that was less about arguing and more about endurance. Instead of asking people to leave, they gave them a reason to want to. Keep reading to find out how one looping song became an unexpected crowd control method.

A tenant near a thin-walled pool snaps after late-night parties and tries an odd tactic

People Party At The Pool Until 4AM, Man Responds With The Pettiest Music Loop Ever
not the actual photo

People keep playing music in the pool area after hours. So I play my own music. On a loop. At max volume?

So it's summer. I am in an apartment next to the pool. The walls are thin.

As in, if you have a conversation in the pool area, I can hear it. Which sucks, but hey, it's a common area.

And the place is supposed to close down at 10pm. Not what I'd like, but those are the rules.

As you can guess by the title of the thread, people are ignoring the closing hours.

And staying up as late as 2am or 4am at some hours, talking or occasionally playing music.

I did it all, called the front office, who told me to call the cops, who said they wouldn't really do much.

"There's no county noise ordinance." No county noise ordinance, you say?

Keep in mind I do know they will enforce o__cenity (Texas gonna Texas.)

So, starting last Friday, when 10pm rolled around and kids were out playing music and screaming in the pool,

I pulled out my own Bluetooth speaker. And played "What's New, Pussycat?" on repeat. Until people left.

Saturday rolls around and there's an email stating the front office is going to lock the pool gates at 10.

They did Saturday night. But Sunday night? Nope. And there's a party going on. Tons of kids screaming.

Out comes the speaker, and we do "What's new pussycat?" on a loop.

So far no one's lasted longer than 30 minutes with it.

When sleep is disrupted night after night, frustration stops being a minor inconvenience and becomes something heavier. Lying awake while voices and music seep through thin walls long after quiet hours should have begun can leave anyone feeling powerless.

In this Reddit story, the original poster (OP) isn’t simply irritated by noise; they’re exhausted, unheard, and dealing with a problem that has been repeatedly dismissed by those meant to enforce the rules.

At its heart, the OP wasn’t initially trying to wage a musical battle or escalate conflict. They were reacting to a pattern of noise, disregard for posted rules, and a lack of effective support from management or local authorities. Night after night, indistinct music and shouting seeped into their apartment.

Calls to the front office and police produced little help, and no formal noise ordinance existed to enforce quiet hours. In psychology, when formal structures fail to protect an individual’s basic needs, such as sleep, safety, and rest, the person may resort to unconventional strategies to assert boundaries.

The looping of “What’s New Pussycat?” at max volume wasn’t random; it became a tool to disrupt the disruption, a kind of protest that restored control, even if awkwardly.

Many onlookers might label this kind of response as immature, but alternative perspectives suggest something deeper: people under chronic stress often shift to indirect coping strategies when direct negotiation or authority intervention fails.

In cases where community norms collide with individual well-being, reactions that seem “dramatic” can be rooted in psychological survival instincts, trying to reclaim one’s environment when no one else will. This echoes broader social psychology principles that humans seek stability and control in chaotic spaces.

Experts have documented how persistent noise can chip away at health and how sleep issues magnify stress. According to a Verywell Mind article on noise pollution and stress, constant, unwanted sound can elevate stress hormone levels, negatively impact sleep, and contribute to anxiety or health problems over time.

Persistent exposure to environmental noise makes the body stay in a heightened alert state, which can exhaust emotional regulation over days and weeks.

This expert insight helps illuminate why the OP responded as they did: their nervous system wasn’t simply “annoyed”; it was repeatedly triggered into stress mode. When sleep cycles are broken, emotional resilience drops, and people become far less patient with unresolved problems.

Their looping music wasn’t cruel; it was an attempt to balance emotional load and enforce quiet in a way that actual channels had failed to do.

Ultimately, this situation speaks to how shared spaces require enforced boundaries, not just posted rules. It’s a reminder that when formal structures fail to protect basic needs like sleep, people will create their own mechanisms of accountability.

Realistic advice isn’t just “be quieter” or “play louder music,” but to push for agreed-upon community enforcement, respectful norms, and solutions that preserve everyone’s rest and well-being.

See what others had to share with OP:

These users suggested looping creepy, childish, or cursed songs to scare people off

luvnuts80 − Playing “The End” by the Doors on repeat is guaranteed to clear people out.

It’s one long and depressing song. Fun fact: my friend use to do karaoke to that song and would clear out the bar he sang at.

He was a d__k, but my 22 year old mind at the time thought it was kinda funny

TenaCVols − You should add "Baby Shark" into the loop.

Splitsurround − please play "tiptoe through the tulips" next so they won't be sure

if they're about to be murdered or not

ScaryRhombus − The Barney theme song has long been my choice for audio violence.

This group praised weaponizing famously annoying novelty songs for maximum chaos

Purrogi − The best thing about this kind of revenge are the music choices. What’s new Pussycat is hilarious.

DocBlondi − Should have thrown in one "It's not usual" after 13 times before back to "What's new Pussycat?"

BayAreaPupMom − Classic! You should add Axel F, the Crazy Frog mix to your playlist.

Also, Barbara Streisand's version of Don't Rain On My Parade.

In my area, I'd add Achy Breaky Heart by Billy Ray Cyrus, which would drive people to near madness,

but perhaps in Texas it might be enjoyable.

These commenters backed niche or abrasive music genres to quickly clear a space

Lucky-Guess8786 − Bagpipe music is also fun to clear out a space. LOL

MindlessSky9 − I recommend anything from the Tibetan Throat Singing genre.

These folks shared personal stories of using repetitive music as effective social warfare

dodgeruk66 − When I was in the 3rd year of my PhD a pair of young DJs moved into the apartment below me.

They would be out until the early hours then come home with friends and keep the party swinging.

I had a 6 CD changer on a pretty powerful hi-fi.

I would point the speakers to the floor put on random song repeat and leave the house for 8hrs every Sunday from 9am.

CDs of choice - German marching band, Bob Marley B-sides, Wham greatest hits,

The Very Best of Country and Sabbath Bloody Sabbath. It's amazing what you find in charity shops.

I guess this mixture didn't help their hangovers/comedowns.

Trippynet − Well done! Reminds me of a time many years ago

when a friend of mine threw a small party for friends at his parent's house (they were away on holiday).

One of the girls he invited decided to bring four guys along that none of us knew.

We called her out on it, my mate wasn't comfortable having people there he'd never met in his parents' home,

but she didn't want to tell them to leave.

My mate also wasn't comfortable asking them as they were all fairly big guys and he didn't want to cause a scene or anything.

We tried making it awkward for them - we all moved to the kitchen so they were pretty much alone in the living room,

hoping they'd take the hint. But no. So, having had a couple of drinks,

I queued up the theme from Ghostbusters on the sound system and set it on repeat.

After the third cycle of the same song, they got the hint (or decided that the "party" was lame) and quietly left.

CoffeeByIV − I applaud your tactics. (A Decade or so ago) When trying to clear drunk 20-somethings out

after a fancy event we tried everything, but they would keep gabbing at their tables, nursing their wine.

Even playing “closing time” and turning on the “ugly lights” did nothing. Turns out the answer was Tom Waits.

Tom Waits cleared out that event all 3 nights for the remaining 6years it ran.

Many readers sympathized with the exhaustion that pushed this Redditor toward musical mischief, even if the method felt delightfully unhinged. Was it petty? Absolutely. Was it effective? Undeniably. When rules failed, and patience ran out, creativity stepped in.

Do you think this kind of playful retaliation crosses a line, or is it fair game when no one’s listening? How would you handle a noise war like this? Drop your takes below; we’re listening.

Annie Nguyen

Annie Nguyen

Hi, I'm Annie Nguyen. I'm a freelance writer and editor for Daily Highlight with experience across lifestyle, wellness, and personal growth publications. Living in San Francisco gives me endless inspiration, from cozy coffee shop corners to weekend hikes along the coast. Thanks for reading!

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